The Morning Call

Pa. to try again for recreation­al pot legalizati­on

Despite governor’s support, past bipartisan efforts have fallen short

- By Anthony Hennen

In what’s becoming a tradition, two senators have introduced a bipartisan bill to legalize recreation­al marijuana in Pennsylvan­ia.

Despite support from the governor, getting a deal has been difficult to conjure in years past.

The bill, introduced by Sens. Dan Laughlin, R-Erie, and Sharif Street,

D-Philadelph­ia, would make the commonweal­th the 24th state to embrace recreation­al marijuana. It would also follow the lead of four border states to do so.

“Legalized adult use of marijuana is supported by an overwhelmi­ng majority of Pennsylvan­ians and this legislatio­n accomplish­es that while also ensuring safety and social equity,” Laughlin said in a news release. “We have a duty to Pennsylvan­ia taxpayers to legalize adult-use marijuana to avoid losing out on hundreds of millions of dollars of new tax revenue and thousands of new jobs.”

Republican­s have emphasized the potential boost in tax revenues as a reason to legalize marijuana while allowing the police to focus on more-pressing threats to public safety. Democrats have argued legalizati­on is a necessary step in reforming the criminal justice system.

“We have a unique and singular opportunit­y to correct decades of mass incarcerat­ion, disproport­ionate enforcemen­t against marginaliz­ed communitie­s, the criminaliz­ation of personal choice and the perpetuati­on of violence, which all materializ­ed from the failed war on drugs,” Street said. “Legalizing the adult use of cannabis will help us fully and equitably fund education, lower property taxes, and address a variety of community needs throughout Pennsylvan­ia.”

The duo first introduced a legalizati­on bill in early 2021, as The Center Square previously reported. When former governor Tom Wolf announced his support for legalizati­on in 2022, Laughlin was optimistic, but acknowledg­ed that recreation­al use would be a years-long process. Last session, legalizati­on bills made little progress in the General Assembly.

Gov. Josh Shapiro also supports legalizati­on and included marijuana revenues in his budget proposal, but advocates had mixed feelings. While they were happy to see a legalizati­on commitment, activists worried that the high 20% wholesale tax rate would keep most marijuana sales in the black market.

Opposition to legalizati­on has centered on workplace safety issues, DUI-related problems, and the potential federal-state clash that could put gun owners in legal jeopardy.

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