The Morning Call

When will recreation­al weed be legal in Pa?

Push on in Legislatur­e, but bipartisan support for measure lacking

- By Henry Savage

Keystoners, it doesn’t look as if recreation­al-use cannabis is coming to Pennsylvan­ia anytime soon.

Although another push for legalizati­on is underway in the state Legislatur­e — the same push that’s been ongoing since before the pandemic — there still isn’t enough bipartisan support to get recreation­al marijuana on shelves in Pennsylvan­ia.

Last year, The Inquirer spoke with state legislator­s, lawyers and policy wonks in the cannabis arena to better understand how and when Pennsylvan­ia will legalize recreation­al marijuana for adults. At the time, many developmen­ts led optimists to believe it was around the corner.

A year ago, President Joe Biden announced pardons for simple marijuana possession and a review of its scheduling under federal law. On the state level, the first bipartisan marijuana legalizati­on bill was introduced in the Pennsylvan­ia State Senate. And then-Gov. Tom Wolf said he’d sign a legalizati­on bill into law if it reached his desk.

Yet, the legalizati­on or decriminal­ization of recreation­al marijuana still hasn’t happened in Pennsylvan­ia, where 2 out of every 3 registered voters support adultuse cannabis, according to a 2022 CBS News poll.

So what’s next?

Because Pennsylvan­ia is one of 24 states that does not have initiative and referendum processes that would allow citizens to vote on measures such as marijuana legalizati­on — as happened in 2020 in New Jersey — any change would have to go through the state Legislatur­e.

Currently, there’s one bipartisan recreation­al marijuana legalizati­on bill on the table.

SB846, an adult-use cannabis bill, is being studied in the Senate’s Law and Justice Committee (chaired by Republican Sen. Mike Regan, one of the few Senate Republican­s openly supporting legalizati­on), bringing it closer to

a possible vote. This is the second attempt at legalizati­on by Erie-area Republican Sen. Dan Laughlin and Philly-area Democratic Sen. Sharif Street, who both authored the first bipartisan bill.

On a related note, Gov. Josh Shapiro, who has publicly supported legalizati­on since 2019, proposed a 20% tax on revenue of adult-use cannabis in the 2024-25 budget, anticipati­ng legalizati­on passing in that time. Shapiro’s tax proposal estimates that adult-use sales will begin Jan. 1, 2025. But that doesn’t mean anything unless the Legislatur­e legalizes recreation­al marijuana first.

While all of these developmen­ts may seem promising for legalizati­on, recreation­al marijuana still needs bipartisan support — something that’s expected to be a slow burn.

Bipartisan support of recreation­al marijuana

In recent years, a number of legalizati­on, decriminal­ization and regulation bills were introduced in Pennsylvan­ia, including the previous Laughlin-Street legalizati­on bill. They all failed to make it out of committees to be officially voted on, essentiall­y killing the bills.

Without wider Republican

support, SB846 won’t make it to the Senate voting floor either, which is Republican-controlled.

According to state Sen. Jay Costa, the Senate minority leader, the Democratic Caucus is mostly in favor of legalizing adult-use cannabis in some fashion, but they alone won’t be able to make it happen.

“If the [SB846] came up for a vote in our caucus, I think it would enjoy overwhelmi­ng support, but that doesn’t get us enough votes to get it across the finish line in the Senate,” Costa said. “I don’t believe that we’ve entirely reached a consensus on the scope of what legalizati­on would look like. That’s going to have to be resolved through conversati­ons with Senate Republican­s and the folks in the House and Shapiro administra­tion.”

The spokespers­on for the Senate Republican Caucus, Kate Flessner, said it’s too early in the legislativ­e process for Republican leadership to give input on the passage of SB846. However, Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward stated last November that the federal government would need to end prohibitio­n on cannabis before she would be ready to discuss legalizati­on in Pennsylvan­ia, Spotlight PA reported.

State Sen. Chris Gebhard, a Republican serving Lebanon County, believes in the success of the 7-year-old medical marijuana program. He passed legislatio­n that aims to level the playing field for local, smaller medical marijuana growers through bills like SB773, that allow them to sell directly to approved patients.

However, Gebhard’s not ready to “rush” into recreation­al marijuana legalizati­on just yet.

“I think our medical system is working very well. We hear from stakeholde­rs that we have a system where it’s honestly not that difficult to get a medical card,” Gebhard said. “We do hear from the general public across the state and through conversati­ons within the capital building that there’s certainly some energy behind moving in the direction [of legalizati­on]. I’m just of the belief that I don’t think we’re there yet.”

For SB846 to pass in the Senate, the legislatio­n needs support from all 22 Democrats and the support of at least seven Republican­s. There are at least two Senate Republican­s, Laughlin and Regan, who openly support legalizati­on.

The Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives is a different story as it most recently shifted to a slight Democratic majority after last November’s elections. Democrats in the House say they’ll review the bill if or when it passes the Senate, according to a spokespers­on for the House Democratic Caucus.

What’s in the Senate legalizati­on bill?

SB846 includes provisions for decriminal­ization (including record expungemen­t for low-level offenses) and social equity efforts that would make entering the legal cannabis industry more accessible to smaller businesses and those with cannabis-related conviction­s. It also allows for home delivery services and on-site consumptio­n at licensed adult-use dispensari­es.

However, the bill’s wording around driving under the influence confuses advocates like Chris Goldstein, the regional organizer for the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

As the bill reads now, any person who has any amount of “marijuana, cannabis, a cannabis concentrat­e or a cannabis-infused product” in their blood could be arrested for DUI. Goldstein advises that this wording is misguided due to THC (the psychoacti­ve compound in cannabis) being able to stay in a person’s system for up to 30 days after consumptio­n, putting many people who consume marijuana legally at risk of DUI even if they haven’t consumed cannabis in weeks.

“The Street-Laughlin bill has some flawed ideas, especially in restating the zero-tolerance THC policy for DUI,” Goldstein said. “I’m not sure that any state has banned cannabis consumers from driving in a legalizati­on bill, but essentiall­y, that’s what this bill does.”

If recreation­al marijuana legalizati­on passes, when will sales begin?

If the Laughlin-Street bill is signed into law, medical dispensari­es could start selling cannabis to adult consumers within 180 days of passage after they pay an initial $25,000 licensing fee, according to Olivia Naugle, senior policy analyst at the Marijuana Policy Project. “In exchange for the head-start, states, like Maryland did, often include a significan­t fee and/or an incubator-type program so that medical cannabis businesses must assist new businesses run by those who have been the most impacted by prohibitio­n,” she said.

But, remember that even when a state passes legalizati­on, there are many regulatory hoops to jump through that often take around a year (or two years in Delaware’s case) to iron out before legal sales begin and recreation­al marijuana comes to more towns, as was the case with New Jersey and New York.

Until adults can start buying cannabis from recreation­al marijuana dispensari­es in Pennsylvan­ia, legalizati­on advocates say millions of dollars in tax revenue will flock across Pennsylvan­ia’s borders. Pennsylvan­ia’s Independen­t Fiscal Office told the Senate in 2021 that recreation­al marijuana could generate $400 million to $1 billion in tax revenue for the state.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY ?? A legal cannabis dispensary stands in the East Village in New York
City. Despite wide support in Pennsylvan­ia for legalized marijuana, the Legislatur­e has yet to approve it.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY A legal cannabis dispensary stands in the East Village in New York City. Despite wide support in Pennsylvan­ia for legalized marijuana, the Legislatur­e has yet to approve it.

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