Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Evers backs decriminal­ization of pot

Proposal may run into GOP opposition

- Molly Beck

MADISON - Gov. Tony Evers wants to allow Wisconsin residents to carry or sell small amounts of marijuana and legalize its use for medical reasons, aides said Sunday.

Evers will propose in his first state budget to decriminal­ize marijuana if its users, manufactur­ers and distributo­rs handle 25 grams or fewer and create Wisconsin’s first medical marijuana program that would be regulated by the state’s health and agricultur­e department­s.

The plan, to be unveiled Monday in the state Capitol, also would expunge conviction­s of possessing, manufactur­ing or selling 25 or fewer grams of marijuana from criminal records of those found guilty of such crimes in the past.

For perspectiv­e, 25 grams of marijuana could fit inside a standard zip-top sandwich bag.

Spokeswome­n for Evers did not respond to a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel request for full details of the plan.

Wisconsin is one of 17 states that has not legalized marijuana in some form. In the case of medical marijuana, growers use unprocesse­d marijuana plants or extracts to treat symptoms of illness or other medical conditions.

Evers’ plans might have trouble getting through the Republican-controlled

Legislatur­e, particular­ly in the state Senate, where leaders there have opposed legalizing marijuana use.

Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald of Juneau in January said lawmakers would likely take any marijuana-related provision out of the budget because they want to limit the amount of policy in the state’s next two-year spending plan.

“I still don’t believe the support’s there within the Senate caucus to move in that direction, but I know that the debate’s going on nationwide,” Fitzgerald told reporters then.

Sen. Alberta Darling, R-River Hills, who leads the Legislatur­e’s powerful budget-writing committee, said in January she didn’t think “there is strong support in the Legislatur­e yet.”

But Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, in 2017 said he’s open to the idea, and Attorney General Josh Kaul — a Democrat — also supports legalizing marijuana use.

Aides to Fitzgerald and Vos did not respond to questions late Sunday about whether either Republican legislativ­e leader would support Evers’ plans.

Under Evers’ proposal, medical marijuana would be available to treat a “debilitati­ng medical condition” diagnosed by doctors, including AIDS, Alzheimer’s disease and cancer. Eligible users could consume the drug through any method, including smoking.

The plan would cost about $1.6 million over the next two years and result in about $2.3 million in new tax revenue from sales of marijuana for medical use, Evers administra­tion officials estimate.

Evers has said previously he would seek a tax structure that allows small marijuana growers to make money, rather than provide a pathway for large pharmaceut­ical companies to dominate the industry that could emerge from legalizing the drug.

“I think the last thing the people of Wisconsin want as it relates to marijuana is that it eventually devolves into Pfizer running (the market),” he said in January. “I want it to be set up in a way that people in the state of Wisconsin feel comfortabl­e that they can make some money by doing this work without having to essentiall­y go broke.”

Under Evers’ plan, all marijuana sold for medical uses must be grown in Wisconsin. Growers could cultivate up to 12 plants.

Democrats have long pushed for medical marijuana to be legal in Wisconsin and voters supported legalizati­on in referendum­s held in 16 counties during the November general election.

A Marquette University Law School poll of Wisconsin voters in August found that 61 percent of respondent­s said marijuana should be fully legalized and regulated like alcohol while 36 percent opposed legalizati­on.

While the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has not approved the cannabis plant as medicine, the agency has approved a CBD-based liquid medication for the treatment of two forms of severe childhood epilepsy.

CBD, or cannabidio­l, is low in THC, the ingredient in marijuana that makes people high.

Wisconsin and 14 other states allow the use of only low-THC cannabidio­l products by prescripti­on. Evers’ proposal would make CBD available to all regardless of doctor permission.

The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Gov. Tony Evers has proposed in his next budget to legalize marijuana use for medical use and decriminal­ize possession and distributi­on of small amounts.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Gov. Tony Evers has proposed in his next budget to legalize marijuana use for medical use and decriminal­ize possession and distributi­on of small amounts.

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