Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Cannabis consumptio­n lounge legislatio­n passed out of the Assembly.

Under measure, they couldn’t serve alcohol; Senate is next stop

- By Colton Lochhead

Supporters of the proposal have argued the need for lounges since Nevadans voted to legalize marijuana use and sales in 2016.

CARSON CITY — Nevada’s cannabis consumptio­n lounge legislatio­n cleared a major hurdle Thursday, a move that comes a little over a month before a moratorium on social use venues is set to expire.

Assembly Bill 341 passed out of the Assembly on a 29-12 vote, with Republican­s Tom Roberts, R-las Vegas, Andy Matthews, R-las Vegas, Annie Black, R-mesquite, and Jill Dickman, R-sparks, voting with Democrats to push the bill over the required twothirds threshold.

Under the bill, the Cannabis Compliance Board would have the authority to regulate consumptio­n lounges throughout the state, with two types of licenses they could give out. One type would be attached to a dispensary, while the other would be for a bar-like independen­t lounge with the ability to sell single-use products to be consumed on-site. Alcohol could not be served in the lounges.

If the legislatio­n is not enacted this session, local government­s could have free

rein to license those lounges themselves starting July 1. A 2019 bill that created the cannabis board also installed a two-year moratorium that prevented local government­s from licensing consumptio­n lounges on their own.

“If we don’t do it, the moratorium would expire. So these were coming one way or another,” said the bill’s sponsor, Assemblyma­n Steve Yeager, D-las Vegas. “It was whether they were going to be regulated and whether the state was going to benefit from some of the licensing fees.”

It was that reasoning that helped swing Roberts, one of four Republican­s who supported the measure in the Assembly, to vote for the measure.

“This was pretty decent regulation that we put together in this bill, so I felt it was important that the state have the regulation­s rather than each municipali­ty,” Roberts said.

Supporters of the proposal have argued the need for lounges since Nevadans voted to legalize marijuana use and sales in 2016. Tourists who visit Las Vegas and stay in the gaming resorts can legally buy cannabis but have nowhere to legally consume it, since the current law only allows for it to be imbibed in a private residence. The current law also means renters could be barred from consuming if their landlord says they aren’t allowed to use marijuana in the rental property.

As it stands, just one lounge exists in Nevada: the Nuwu Cannabis Tasting Room, which opened in late 2019. The facility is owned by the

Las Vegas Paiute Tribe, which is a sovereign nation and is connected to Nuwu’s 16,000-square-foot marijuana superstore. Like many other businesses, the tasting room was forced to close last March due to the pandemic.

The bill now heads to the Senate, where Yeager said he likes the bill’s odds of getting approved before the Legislatur­e ends on May 31.

‘Right to Return’ advancing

A bill that would give hospitalit­y, leisure and travel workers who were laid off during the COVID-19 pandemic the right to get their jobs back cleared the Assembly Commerce and Labor Committee on Thursday.

The committee approval of Senate Bill 386, commonly called the “right to return” bill, comes a day after the bill was amended and voted out of the Senate.

The bill still needs approval in the full Assembly.

 ?? John Locher The Associated Press ?? Under a bill headed for the state Senate, the Cannabis Compliance Board would have the authority to regulate consumptio­n lounges throughout the state.
John Locher The Associated Press Under a bill headed for the state Senate, the Cannabis Compliance Board would have the authority to regulate consumptio­n lounges throughout the state.

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