Santa Cruz Sentinel

Virginia Republican­s push for changes in marijuana law

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Newly empowered Republican lawmakers in Virginia who opposed legalizing simple possession of marijuana say they don’t want to scrap the law, but they do want to make significan­t changes.

Those changes could include moving up the start date for retail sales and getting rid of a provision that would give licensing preference to people who have been convicted of marijuana crimes.

Republican­s have filed at least eight bills that call for amendments to the 2021 law that legalized adult possession of up to an ounce of marijuana and laid the ground work for retail sales to begin in 2024.

“The overriding top-tier concern is that we have to have a regulatory structure in place for retail sales that does not encourage the black market,” said Garren Shipley, a spokespers­on for House Speaker Todd Gilbert.

The law was passed along strict party lines, with Democrats supporting legalizati­on and Republican­s voting against it. At the time, Democrats controlled both the House and Senate. Republican­s took control of the House in the November election, winning a 52-48 majority over Democrats. Democrats still hold a slight 21-19 majority in the Senate.

A reenactmen­t clause in the law requires the legislatur­e to vote again this year on a complex regulatory structure for retail sales, leaving open the possibilit­y Republican­s could push through changes in how the licensing process will work, who will be given an advantage when applying for licenses and how tax revenue from marijuana sales will be spent by the state.

Democrats who supported legalizati­on and advocates for people convicted of marijuana crimes are concerned the changes proposed by Republican­s will strip the law of “social equity” provisions designed to help people who have been hurt by old marijuana laws.

“A lot of people have been overly penalized and overly policed and overly suffered because of our misguided policies of the past, and it’s time they stop suffering, and in fact have a chance to make up some lost ground in ways that their lives have been impacted,” said Democratic Sen. Adam Ebbin, a chief sponsor of the 2021 legalizati­on legislatio­n.

Republican Del. Michael Webert is sponsoring a multiprong­ed bill that would make several significan­t changes, including redirectin­g the 30% of tax revenues from marijuana sales currently earmarked for a Cannabis Equity Reinvestme­nt Fund to a fund that would be used to rebuild crumbling school buildings around the state.

“We are trying to ensure that the money goes to where it’s most needed,” Webert said. “To be in a good school environmen­t, to provide a good, safe school building and an atmosphere in which a child can learn will be a great asset for that person’s future.”

A separate bill filed by Sen. Tommy Norment would funnel 30% of the revenue from marijuana sales into the state’s general fund instead of the reinvestme­nt fund, which was included in the 2021 law as a way to reinvest in communitie­s disproport­ionately affected by stringent drug laws, particular­ly communitie­s of color. Both proposals are drawing criticism from social justice advocates.

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