The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State Senate president: It’s time to legalize pot

Failed bills being reworked into new marijuana proposal

- By Christine Stuart CTNEWSJUNK­IE.COM

HARTFORD — Despite the obvious hurdles of legislatin­g in an election year, Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion is looking to legalize adult sales of marijuana.

A senior administra­tion official said they are in the process of taking three bills and amendments that failed last year and combining them into one proposal that would include regulation, expungemen­t of criminal records, an equity commission, and taxation.

Last year, the three different bills to legalize, regulate, and tax marijuana passed out of committee, but none of them received a vote in the House or the Senate. At the end of the session, lawmakers who supported legalizati­on were ready to try a different path — a constituti­onal amendment.

It’s a path some lawmakers are considerin­g again this year because they doubt Lamont’s ability to pull off a legislativ­e victory on legalizati­on.

“We need to show the public that we want to get this done,” Rep. Josh Elliott, D-Hamden, said. “At least a constituti­onal amendment would be forward movement.”

Elliott acknowledg­ed that a constituti­onal amendment wasn’t ideal because it would take until 2024 for sales to start in Connecticu­t. However, the upside in an election year would be asking lawmakers only to vote on giving the public a chance to weigh in on the issue, which gives Elliott hope that it’s a winning path.

Connecticu­t doesn’t have ballot initiative and referendum, which is how legalizati­on efforts moved forward in most other states.

The administra­tion is hoping to change Elliott’s mind.

“The administra­tion doesn’t believe the Connecticu­t Constituti­on is the proper venue for these kinds of policy decisions,” Max Reiss, a spokesman for Lamont, said. “Making changes in statute

is the best venue for the path to the legalizati­on of marijuana for adult use.”

Senate President Martin Looney, D-New Haven, said he’s heard the governor would support legalizati­on.

“I think its time has come,” Looney said. “Our neighborin­g states are all doing it or all contemplat­ing it.”

He said he thinks it happens faster in states with ballot initiative and referendum than in states where it needs to be legislated because opponents “may have a stronger hand in that setting.”

Looney said he’s hopeful they can get it done this year, but it’s important to propose it again to get it moving immediatel­y and shorten the time between proposal and actual passage.

Steven Hawkins, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project, said passage of legalizati­on in Connecticu­t this year would come at the right point in terms of developmen­t of the market for the cannabis industry.

He said public support is 2-to-1 in favor of legalizati­on and there are six states looking at ballot initiative­s while New York and Connecticu­t are looking at legislativ­e action.

Illinois was the most recent state to legalize marijuana through legislatio­n.

Hawkins said Illinois Gov.

J.B. Pritzker shaped the bill, but brought together all the various interests to have a say in the product.

Illinois also created some good equity provisions to help communitie­s most affected by the war on drugs benefit from legalizati­on, Hawkins said.

In addition to erasing the criminal records of hundreds of thousands of people with low-level marijuana arrests, the Illinois law gives innercity residents impacted by the war on drugs a chance to get involved in the industry, and invests 25 percent of the revenue back into the affected communitie­s.

The proposal being contemplat­ed by the Lamont administra­tion also would seek to give revenue back to impacted communitie­s and contemplat­es how to make sure individual­s affected by the war on drugs get a chance to be involved in the new, legal industry.

“Every state is going to have its nuances, but we don’t have to keep reinventin­g the wheel,” Hawkins said. “If the 5th largest state economy in the country with one of the largest dense metropolit­an areas in the country can figure this out, it can be done.”

In Connecticu­t, there doesn’t seem to be any Republican support for the issue. State Rep. Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford, said the marijuana issue has been around since former Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s time in office.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? State Senate President Martin Looney
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media State Senate President Martin Looney

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