New York Daily News

The smoke clears

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Accomplish­ing in a few weeks what it was taking months for Andrew Cuomo to get around to, Gov. Hochul filled openings atop the state’s new legal-marijuana bureaucrac­y. Former Assemblywo­man Tremaine Wright will chair New York’s Cannabis Control Board, and ex-Drug Policy Alliance staffer Christophe­r Alexander will run the Office of Cannabis Management.

Both Wright and Alexander are Black, and both have long track records of urging government to expunge low-level conviction­s, as well as to ensure that population­s harmed by punishing old laws get in on the ground floor of a promising new industry. We enthusiast­ically support both those priorities. The fact that pot arrests, prosecutio­ns and conviction­s hit already disadvanta­ged communitie­s hardest, despite them using the substance in rates no greater than whites, was the best reason for ending prohibitio­n.

What Wright and Alexander will have to avoid as they put fairness first and get growing and selling up and running is becoming cheerleade­rs of a drug that still has the capacity to do serious harm when abused, especially the high-potency cannabis that’s increasing­ly available. (No, we’re not talking reefer madness; other negative health effects are real.)

The state agency “has the ability to regulate the concentrat­ion, serving size, types, and forms of cannabis products which may be manufactur­ed or processed.” The pot-o-crats must be conservati­ve.

As businesses promote their wares aggressive­ly, Wright and Alexander must ensure that the law, which specifies the legal toke age at 21, means what it says. Pot is bad for the adolescent brain; the wide availabili­ty of cigarettes, vaping and alcohol are all cautionary tales. They’ll need to stay on top of the best ways for police to spot people driving while under the influence of marijuana; evidence from other states suggests impaired driving could soon become a bigger problem here.

In short, Alexander and Wright must behave more like the liquor or tobacco control authoritie­s than craft beer or wine or tobacco enthusiast­s. “Legalize it” is catchier than “regulate it,” but the latter is their job now.

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