Daily Press

Northam signs more of this year’s bills into law

To-go cocktails get extension, 12-month birth control prescripti­ons get greenlight

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Gov. Ralph Northam signed more bills into law, including a measure that aims to boost the sale of electric vehicles and another permitting the removal of a statue of segregatio­nist Harry F. Byrd Sr., a former governor and U.S. senator, from Capitol Square.

Northam’s office announced Friday morning that he has acted on over a dozen more bills as he makes his way through this year’s legislativ­e work.

Also among them were measures intended to modernize public health funding, continue allowing to-go cocktails and give Virginians who rely on Medicaid up to a 12-month prescripti­on of birth control.

“We are making tremendous progress on the issues that matter most to Virginians, from heath care and education to economic opportunit­y and our environmen­t,” Northam said in a statement.

The bulk of the work of this year’s legislativ­e session wrapped up in late February. Next month, the Democrat-controlled General Assembly will reconvene briefly to consider any amendments or vetoes Northam proposes.

Northam’s office announced two bills Friday he would seek to change.

One deals with the research and reporting requiremen­ts of the Virginia Parole Board. Northam wants part of the bill related to monthly reporting to kick in sooner than lawmakers envisioned. The measure was touted by Democrats as a way to increase transparen­cy at the board, which has been facing criticism from GOP lawmakers, victims’ families and prosecutor­s for nearly a year. Republican­s said the measure didn’t go nearly far enough.

Another proposed change to a bill sponsored by Del. Don Scott intends to clarify that so-called “games of skill” will be prohibited beginning July 1, Northam’s office said.

Lawmakers had been set to ban the machines, which have proliferat­ed in restaurant­s, bars and convenienc­e stores in recent years, last year. But they agreed to a reprieve of just one year with the intention of taxing the machines and using the revenue to fund a coronaviru­s-relief plan.

The Virginia Mercury reported earlier this week that confusion had spread about a bill from this year’s session and whether it could end up giving the industry the chance to operate into 2022.

As the governor continues his work evaluating bills, advocates of marijuana legalizati­on are anxiously waiting to see what action he will take on a complicate­d measure that would legalize marijuana for adult recreation­al use in 2024.

Many organizati­ons were deeply disappoint­ed in the version that squeaked out of the legislatur­e at the 11th hour and have asked the governor for changes, including moving up the legalizati­on date.

The bill was a top priority for Democrats, who framed legalizati­on as a necessary step to end the disparate treatment of people of color under current marijuana laws.

But talks between Democrats in the House and Senate grew tense. A compromise version of the bill — that almost no one seemed completely satisfied with — did not emerge until the end of the work day.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Ralph Northam signed a measure permitting the removal of a statue of segregatio­nist Harry F. Byrd Sr., a former governor and U.S. senator, from Capitol Square.
STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Ralph Northam signed a measure permitting the removal of a statue of segregatio­nist Harry F. Byrd Sr., a former governor and U.S. senator, from Capitol Square.

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