Chicago Sun-Times

How to make pot-smoking laws more fair citywide

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ACity Council committee properly snuffed out — for the time being — a mayoral effort to create more licensed locations for recreation­al marijuana smoking.

But in the interest of keeping potsmoking practices aboveboard across the whole city, the aldermen, mayor and state lawmakers should get back to work on this issue. And soon.

The City Council’s licensing committee on Wednesday decided to recess rather than vote on an ordinance proposed by Mayor Lori Lightfoot aimed at expanding the number of places where recreation­al marijuana can be smoked legally.

The proposed ordinance would have allowed marijuana smoking inside Chicago’s more than 40 tobacco smoke shops, in addition to the city’s nine marijuana dispensari­es. But a group of black and Latino aldermen this week found fault with this plan because there are very few tobacco shops and dispensari­es in predominan­tly black and brown neighborho­ods.

The unintended consequenc­es of the ordinance, they warned, might be that pot users in black and Latino neighborho­ods set up unlicensed places to smoke, or just do so more in public places, leading to arrests.

The proposed ordinance is handcuffed by state law, and that’s the problem. The state restricts marijuana smoking to private residences and dispensari­es while allowing municipali­ties to include tobacco shops — but no other locations. That means no marijuanao­nly smoke shops or Amsterdam-style cafes where weed smoking would be legal.

In a written statement, the mayor’s office said it will “continue working with City Council members to refine the ordinance by working within the confines of the state statute.”

That’s a start. But the solution lies in revisiting state law to expand the type of businesses where marijuana usage would be legal.

Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), the mayor’s City Council floor leader, said the state’s marijuana statutes could be revisited after the new General Assembly is sworn in this month.

Nobody wants legal pot-smoking spots to overrun a neighborho­od, which the city easily could avoid through proper zoning and regulation. But increasing the number of locations where cannabis legally can be consumed would make it less likely that people would smoke pot in public stairwells, gangways and the like, inviting arrest.

As Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez (33rd) noted this week, legalizing recreation­al marijuana was “righting a wrong in history where so many people were criminaliz­ed — mostly people of color.”

Legalized pot cannot be allowed to do the same.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Customers shop for recreation­al marijuana on New Year’s Day at Dispensary 33 in Chicago.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Customers shop for recreation­al marijuana on New Year’s Day at Dispensary 33 in Chicago.

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