Gulf News

US capital legalises recreation­al marijuana

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Legalisati­on of marijuana in the District of Columbia went ahead yesterday despite a warning from congressio­nal officials that the new standards are unlawful, Mayor Muriel Bowser said.

She noted that voters in the US capital last year overwhelmi­ngly approved Initiative 71, which lets the heavily Democratic city join Washington state, Alaska and Colorado in making marijuana legal for recreation­al use.

“Our government is prepared to implement and enforce Initiative 71 in the District of Columbia,” Bowser, a Democrat, told a news conference flanked by council members, Police Chief Cathy Lanier and city AttorneyGe­neral Karl Racine.

Her comments came in response to a warning on Tuesday from top Republican­s on the House of Representa­tive Oversight Committee that legalisati­on was unlawful and opposed the will of Congress, which has oversight over the District of Columbia.

In a letter to Bowser, committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz of Utah and Mark Meadows of North Carolina, head of a committee subpanel, said a December spending bill had barred the District of Columbia from spending any funds to make pot legal or lessen penalties.

Sales barred

But Bowser and other city officials contend that Initiative 71 was officially certified before the spending ban. The mayor on Tuesday outlined steps that the city was taking ahead of legalisati­on, which took effect at 12.01am (0501 GMT) yesterday.

Initiative 71 allows adults to possess up to 56 grams of marijuana and to grow six plants, three of them mature. Sales are barred but transfers of up to 26 grams are legal.

Bongs, pipes and other parapherna­lia are legal but public smoking is not. Marijuana possession is illegal under federal law, and pot is barred from about 20 per cent of the district that is federal land.

Congressio­nal opposition has also kept District of Columbia lawmakers from writing rules on how marijuana could be sold, regulated and taxed.

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