Daily Press

Youngkin nixes pot and wage measures

Vetoes come a day after Alexandria arena deal collapses

- By Gavin Stone

Gov. Glenn Youngkin on Thursday vetoed seven bills, including those with the potential to reshape life in Virginia.

HB 698 and SB 448 aimed to establish a retail market for marijuana starting in May 2025. HB 1 and SB 1 would have increased the state’s minimum wage from $12 per hour to $13.50 at the start of the new year and $15 per hour starting in 2026. Both passed the House and Senate by tight margins.

The marijuana bill would have “endanger(ed) Virginians’ health and safety,” Youngkin said in a release.

“States following this path have seen adverse effects on children’s and adolescent’s health and safety, increased gang activity and violent crime, significan­t deteriorat­ion in mental health, decreased road safety, and significan­t costs associated with retail marijuana that far exceed tax revenue,” he said, adding that a retail market wouldn’t end illegal sales or ensure product safety.

“Addressing the inconsiste­ncies in enforcemen­t and regulation in Virginia’s current laws does not justify expanding access to cannabis, following the failed paths of other states and endangerin­g Virginians’ health and safety.”

The governor cited a 400% increase in calls since 2016 to U.S. Poison Control regarding children who have consumed high amounts of edible cannabis, and an 85% increase in such calls to the Blue Ridge Poison Control Center since possession of cannabis became legal in the state.

In 2021, Virginia became the first Southern state to legalize marijuana use, possession and cultivatio­n in small amounts, but buying it continues to be illegal for those without a medical marijuana card.

In striking down HB 1, Youngkin explained he prefers to let the free market decide salaries and wages “dynamicall­y.” He called the proposed increases “arbitrary” and argued it will increase operationa­l costs for

small businesses outside of Northern Virginia, forcing them to increase prices which will drive up inflation, “ultimately hurting the workers the proposal seeks to assist.”

“This wage mandate imperils market freedom and economic competitiv­eness,” reads Youngkin’s statement.

Youngkin also vetoed three other bills:

SB696 — would allow those convicted of felony offenses relating to marijuana distributi­on prior to July 2021 who are still in prison or on probation to have an automatic hearing to consider modifying their sentences.

HB157 — would eliminate the exemption from minimum wage requiremen­ts for farm workers and temporary foreign workers

HB974 — would allow employees to satisfy the burden of proof in workers’ compensati­on claims based on circumstan­tial evidence and the testimony of others.

He signed 100 other bills Thursday including “bills that strengthen law enforcemen­t’s ability to prosecute child predators and expand Department of Correction­s inmate access to quality health services.”

The marijuana legislatio­n advanced mostly along party lines, and the minimum wage bills passed strictly on party lines, meaning any override attempt would be almost certain to fail in the narrowly controlled Democratic chambers.

Youngkin announced the vetoes a day after the public collapse of one of his top legislativ­e priorities: a deal to bring the NHL’s Washington Capitals and NBA’s Washington Wizards to Alexandria.

The teams’ majority owner announced they would instead be staying in D.C.

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