Los Angeles Times

This burgeoning industry can lift up South L.A.

- Assembly member Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr. represents Assembly District 59. He can be reached at (213) 744-2111. By Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr.

Amajority of California­ns voted in support of legalizing medical and adult-use cannabis. Clearly, the people believe that cannabis is not a dangerous drug when sold and consumed responsibl­y — and that the cannabis economy, once legalized and regulated, can serve in the best interest of California­ns.

Many have asked why we should continue funding a losing war on cannabis when we can reap the benefits of this economy. Many have compared the emergence of legalized cannabis to the history of the alcohol industry.

Cannabis prohibitio­n was supposed to lower crime and reduce social problems. Instead, prohibitio­n has overloaded our courts and prisons, while social problems persist. The people wisely made medical and recreation­al cannabis consumptio­n legal in California; now it’s up to the Legislatur­e and law enforcemen­t to work out the details.

I’m eager to have my State Assembly District 59, encompassi­ng most of South Los Angeles, participat­e in this new economy. District 59 has been historical­ly underserve­d and has felt the devastatin­g and debilitati­ng effects of the war on drugs, but I strongly believe that we can reverse the stigma associated with cannabis and allow this burgeoning industry to uplift our community.

There’s a reason legal cannabis has been nicknamed the “green rush.” The legal medical cannabis market was already worth an estimated $7.2 billion in 2016, and recreation­al cannabis could create more than 250,000 jobs in the state by 2020.

In District 59, where our unemployme­nt rate is much higher than the state average, we simply cannot afford to miss out on this opportunit­y. Historical­ly underserve­d communitie­s— especially those communitie­s that were on the receiving end of the war on cannabis — deserve to reap the benefits of this new industry.

As we formulate and implement medical and adult-use regulation­s, we must allow those who previously operated in the undergroun­d market to move into the legal market. Once on the wrong side of a bad law, they will now be able to contribute to the collective well-being of our community and local economy. Once criminals, they’ll now be business owners.

We must actively encourage the transition from criminalit­y to legitimacy. We cannot allow those who are operating illegally in the undergroun­d market to continue to put health and public safety at risk. Instead, we should urge them to operate in compliance with local and state law by providing them a pathway for success, perhaps through smallbusin­ess loans and equity programs implemente­d at the local level.

We also need to make sure that our community members have an opportunit­y to obtain employment in these newly regulated businesses. This can be achieved by requiring that operators hire within our communitie­s, ensuring that people convicted of nonviolent crimes are not barred from employment and providing low-cost training for local community members. It is only through this inclusive approach that we can equitably spread the benefits of legal cannabis.

Our new federal administra­tion seems intent on reviving a war on drugs — which history has shown to be more of a war on people of color. But we in California, and especially in South Los Angeles, have an opportunit­y to prove that legalizati­on and regulation can guarantee public safety and spur economic growth far better than mass incarcerat­ion.

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