Los Angeles Times

Bill legalizing pot passes in Vermont

The state is the first in which lawmakers, not a ballot measure, OK recreation­al use.

- By Kurtis Lee kurtis.lee@latimes.com

Eight states have legalized marijuana for recreation­al use. That left-leaning Vermont is poised to join them is hardly a surprise.

But unlike the other states, which all legalized pot through ballot measures, Vermont lawmakers are taking the lead.

On Wednesday, the state Legislatur­e became the first in the United States to approve a bill legalizing recreation­al marijuana. Republican Gov. Phil Scott has indicated he will soon sign the measure into law.

The move by lawmakers shows how far the legalizati­on movement has come. Ballot measures allow lawmakers to hide their own opinions on the issue. Bills force them to take a public stance and assume the political risks.

Those risks have diminished as public support for legal pot has grown. A Gallup poll in October found that 64% of Americans supported making marijuana legal.

Other state legislatur­es could soon follow Vermont’s example. Bills are scheduled to be introduced in Rhode Island and Connecticu­t.

And in New Jersey, Democratic Gov.-elect Phil Murphy has pledged to sign such legislatio­n. Leaders of the Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e there have said a measure could be passed by early spring.

In Vermont, legalizati­on has been debated for years, with most polls showing widespread public support for it. Among voters there, 57% support allowing adults to possess and grow limited amounts of marijuana, according to a survey conducted last year by Public Policy Polling. A total of 39% are opposed.

The bill passed Wednesday by the Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e allows people 21 and older to possess up to an ounce of marijuana and to grow up to two plants to maturity at a time. The legislatio­n does not create a system in which dispensari­es sell marijuana — as is the case in most of the other states where recreation­al pot is legal.

“This is a big step forward for Vermont,” said Matt Simon, New England political director for the Marijuana Policy Project, a group that advocates for legalizati­on.

“Vermonters should be proud that their state is becoming the first to do this legislativ­ely, rather than by ballot initiative.”

The vote on Wednesday in Vermont came a week after the Trump administra­tion announced that it would scrap an Obama-era policy offering legal shelter for state-sanctioned marijuana sales.

But if other legislatur­es push ahead with their plans, New Hampshire would be the only state in New England in which recreation­al pot is not legal. Maine and Massachuse­tts both passed legalizati­on measures in 2016.

“States are not sitting back and waiting for the federal government to change laws,” said Mason Tvert, who has helped lead efforts to legalize marijuana in several places.

“Vermont could very well be the first state in history to legalize through the Legislatur­e, but not the last to do it this year,” he said.

 ?? Jeb Wallace-Brodeur Associated Press ?? VERMONT STATE SEN. Dick Sears discusses a marijuana legalizati­on measure in the state Capitol. Gov. Phil Scott is expected to sign the legislatio­n into law.
Jeb Wallace-Brodeur Associated Press VERMONT STATE SEN. Dick Sears discusses a marijuana legalizati­on measure in the state Capitol. Gov. Phil Scott is expected to sign the legislatio­n into law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States