The Mercury News

Lawmakers vote to legalize marijuana

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RICHMOND, VA. >> Virginia lawmakers gave final approval Saturday to a bill that will legalize marijuana for adult recreation­al use, but not until 2024, when retail sales of the drug would also begin.

With a compromise bill having cleared the state House and Senate, Virginia becomes the first Southern state to vote to legalize marijuana, joining 15 other states and the District of Columbia. The legislatio­n now goes to Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, who supports legalizati­on.

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 in recent days as the two chambers wrangled over significan­t difference­s between their versions of the legislatio­n.

Negotiatio­ns continued into Saturday when, late in the afternoon, details of a compromise agreement were made publicly available.

Under the legislatio­n that passed, possession of up to an ounce of marijuana will become legal beginning Jan. 1, 2024, at the same time sales will begin and regulation­s will go into effect to control the marijuana marketplac­e in Virginia.

Under a provision Senate Democrats insisted on, the legislatio­n will include a reenactmen­t clause that will require a second vote from the General Assembly, but only on the regulatory framework and criminal penalties for several offenses, including underage use and public consumptio­n of marijuana. A second vote will not be required on legalizati­on.

The Senate had sought to legalize simple possession this year to immediatel­y end punishment­s for people with small amounts of marijuana, but House Democrats argued that legalizati­on without a legal market for marijuana could promote the growth of the black market.

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