Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Details of state weed legalizati­on bill announced

- By Robert McCoppin and Jennifer Smith Richards rmccoppin@chicagotri­bune.com jrichards@chicagotri­bune.com

A proposed law to legalize recreation­al use of marijuana in Illinois would allow possession of up to 30 grams of the plant for residents 21 and over, a $20 million low-interest loan program to promote “social equity” in business ownership, and expungemen­t of misdemeano­r and Class 4 felony marijuana conviction­s.

At the heart of the measure is ensuring that communitie­s that have been disproport­ionately affected by enforcemen­t of lowerlevel drug crimes would be able to benefit from the legal pot business in Illinois, said Gov. J.B. Pritzker and lawmakers who worked on the measure at an announceme­nt Saturday.

“Illinois is going to have the most equity-centric law in the nation,” Pritzker said at the Black United Fund of Illinois on Chicago’s South Side. The governor and lawmakers touted a central social justice provision of their proposal: Expunging what they estimate would be 800,000 low-level drug conviction­s. Revenue from Illinois’ marijuana industry would be reinvested in communitie­s that lawmakers said have been “devastated” by the nation’s war on drugs.

Under the proposed rules, no new large-scale commercial growers would be permitted to set up shop here, at least for now. Instead, the focus would be on small “craft” growers, with an emphasis on helping people of color become entreprene­urs in the weed industry. In addition, adults would be allowed to grow up to five plants per household, in a locked room out of public view, with the permission of the landowner.

“We have to ensure it’s not a small group of people getting very rich,” said Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, one of the measure’s sponsors. “We want to make a lot of new business leaders in the state.”

Municipali­ties could ban retail stores within their boundaries within the first year of the program. After that, any ban would have to come through a voter referendum.

According to a summary from Pritzker’s office, permit fees would be $100,000 for growers and $30,000 for retailers, with lower fees for applicants from minority areas disproport­ionately affected by conviction­s in the war on drugs. There would also be a business developmen­t fee of 5% of total sales or $500,000, whichever is less, for cultivator­s, and up to $200,000 for dispensari­es, with lower fees for “social equity applicants.”

Cultivator­s and processors would pay 7% of gross sales to dispensari­es, while consumers would pay a 10% sales tax on products with less than 35% THC, the component that gets users high; 20% for all cannabisin­fused products, such as edibles; and 25% sales tax on products with more than 35% THC, such as for concentrat­ed extracts known as shatter and wax.

Municipali­ties may add an extra 3% sales tax as well, with counties tacking on an additional 0.5% in incorporat­ed areas, and 3.5% in unincorpor­ated areas.

Of the tax revenue generated, 35% will go to the state General Fund, 25% for community reinvestme­nt, 20% for mental health and substance abuse treatment, 10% for the state’s unpaid bills, 8% for law enforcemen­t training grants, and 2% for public drug education.

Those who treat substance abuse warned of an increase in addiction if marijuana use is made legal.

Aaron Weiner, director of addiction services at Linden Oaks Behavioral Health in Naperville, emphasized his concerns about the lack of limits on THC concentrat­ion, that advertisin­g will be allowed, that marijuana shops can be 1,000 feet from schools, and that concentrat­es and extracts can be sold. “This is a bill to generate money for the marijuana industry,” he said. “We have other, more responsibl­e options for drug policy — our state deserves better.”

A group that opposes legalizati­on said the bill would usher in an “addiction-for-profit industry” that will have “devastatin­g impacts on citizens.” Smart Approaches to Marijuana supports efforts to slow down on legalizati­on. “Marijuana is not inevitable,” Kevin Sabet, the president and founder of SAM, said in a written statement.

Proponents on Saturday said that what makes the bill stand out is people of color were at the center of the measure’s negotiatio­ns, where they hadn’t been before. “It’s only fair,” said Sen. Toi Hutchinson, DChicago Heights.

The governor would appoint a cannabis regulation oversight officer who would recommend changes to the law and rules, and would coordinate regulation among the department­s of agricultur­e, revenue, financial and profession­al regulation, state police, public health, commerce and economic opportunit­y, and human services.

Advertisin­g would be prohibited near schools, playground­s, public transit and public property, and any advertisin­g meant to appeal to minors would be banned, lawmakers said.

Packaging would be sealed and labeled, childresis­tant, and required to state that cannabis “can impair cognition and may be habit forming,” and should not be used by pregnant or breastfeed­ing women. It would be illegal to resell marijuana, and to take it out of state, since it remains illegal under federal law.

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