Springfield News-Sun

Virginia is 1st in South to legalize marijuana

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND, VA. — Virginia became the first Southern state to legalize marijuana Wednesday, as lawmakers voted to approve Gov. Ralph Northam’s proposed changes to a bill that will allow adults to possess and cultivate small amounts starting in July.

Northam sent the bill back to lawmakers substantia­lly changed from the version they sent him in February. The amendments lawmakers agreed to would accelerate the timeline of legalizati­on by about three years, well before retail sales would begin, a move that’s been cheered by racial justice advocates.

“The time has come for our state to legalize marijuana. The amendments ensure that while we’re doing the complicate­d work of standing up a commercial market, we aren’t delaying immediate reforms that will make our Commonweal­th more equitable for all Virginians,” House Majority Leader Charniele Herring said in urging her colleagues to approve the governor’s changes.

Democrats said the bill was a matter of urgency, a necessary step to end what state figures show is a disparate treatment of people of color under current marijuana laws.

Northam’s amendments cleared the House 53-44 with two abstention­s during a oneday session held for the purpose of putting the finishing touches on the year’s legislatio­n. In the Senate, lawmakers deadlocked 20-20 and Democratic Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax broke the tie, voting to approve the changes.

The final version of the legislatio­n would allow adults 21 and up to legally possess up to one ounce (28.3 grams) of cannabis without the intent to distribute beginning July 1. It also would allow the home cultivatio­n of up to four plants per household beginning July 1. Public use of the drug will be prohibited.

“This is not going to generate some ganja fest at Jiffy Lube Pavilion out in the parking lot, because that is smoking in public. Just like you can’t drink in public, you can’t smoke in public under this,” Democratic Sen. Scott Surovell said.

It will be years before legal retail sales follow legalized possession. The bill lays out the complex process of creating a new state agency to oversee the marijuana marketplac­e, with sales beginning and regulation­s taking effect on Jan. 1, 2024.

Many parts of the bill dealing with the regulatory framework will have to be reapproved by lawmakers next year. The possession and cultivatio­n pieces will not.

Republican­s, who overwhelmi­ngly opposed the bill when it initially went through the General Assembly, railed against the latest version citing several reasons.

GOP Del. Chris Head called the bill “a train wreck.”

“The hard-fought compromise that barely made it out of this chamber and over to the Senate has just been discarded. And why is that? It’s because some activists want marijuana legalized and they want it legalized now, consequenc­es be damned,” he said.

Some Republican­s also took issue with labor provisions in the new version of the bill, in particular a change that says the government can revoke or suspend licenses issued under the new law in cases where an employer has refused to “remain neutral regarding any union organizing efforts by employees.”

During the legislativ­e session, the Senate sought to legalize simple possession beginning in July, but House Democrats argued that legalizati­on without a legal market for marijuana could promote the growth of the black market. The bill as passed in February would not have legalized simple possession until 2024.

Herring said Wednesday that home cultivatio­n would give Virginians a way to legally acquire cannabis while the retail market is being put in place.

Many of the other amendments lawmakers dealt with Wednesday were minor or technical in nature and dispensed with more easily. For instance, both chambers quickly signed off on a tweak to a sweeping voting rights measure that supporters say will protect and expand access to the ballot box. And they approved minor changes to a measure intended to improve the beleaguere­d unemployme­nt system.

Both chambers also signed off on a budget amendment from Northam that will fund an outside investigat­ion into a small component of a larger controvers­y over the state parole board. Republican­s blasted the governor’s proposal as far less substantiv­e than necessary and said it would allow the administra­tion to keep quiet any unflatteri­ng findings.

Lawmakers had no veto overrides to consider this year. Northam took action on 552 bills from the 2021 session and didn’t veto any, according to his office.

 ?? L. TODD SPENCER / THE VIRGINIANP­ILOT ?? Virginia lawmakers approved Gov. Ralph Northam’s amendment to legalize marijuana starting
July 1.
L. TODD SPENCER / THE VIRGINIANP­ILOT Virginia lawmakers approved Gov. Ralph Northam’s amendment to legalize marijuana starting July 1.

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