The News-Times

Cannabis bill passes crucial legislativ­e committee

Alternativ­e toll proposals approved by finance, revenue panel

- By Emilie Munson

HARTFORD — The final piece of marijuana legalizati­on legislatio­n passed a key legislativ­e committee Wednesday, along with two alternativ­e toll proposals.

Legalizing recreation­al cannabis use and implementi­ng electronic tolling on highways are significan­t priorities of Gov. Ned Lamont, but face uncertain futures in the General Assembly.

The passages of these bills by the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee on Wednesday sets the stage for final negotiatio­ns between legislativ­e leadership and Lamont on marijuana and tolls.

The Finance Committee approved a bill setting a $35 per ounce levy on cannabis flowers and $13.50 per ounce on the rest of the plant. It also includes a 6.35 percent states sales tax and 3 percent local sales tax, which will go to the towns that host dispensari­es, and under an amendment offered to the committee, behavioral and mental-health programs.

The committee predicted their marijuana tax plan would bring $57.2 million to the state in fiscal year 2021.

The bill would send most cannabis revenue to “community developmen­t corporatio­ns,” approved by the state, which would use the most to invest in job training, education and community rebuilding initiative­s in urban areas hit hard by the war on drugs.

Rep. Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford, an opponent of legalized cannabis, said he was concerned that retails sales for adults could impinge on the state’s successful medical marijuana program. “This program will decimate our medical program,” Candelora warned.

The committee also advanced a bill proposed by Sen. John Fonfara, D-Hartford, to establish a commission to create a 30-year transporta­tion improvemen­t plan and propose the appropriat­e way to fund it — perhaps tolls, or gas tax changes, or borrowing. The legislatio­n could be a third way on tolls. Lamont is pushing strongly for passage in 2019, but with all Republican­s firmly against tolls, some Democrats opposing them and others on the fence, it’s no done deal.

Sen. Steve Cassano, DMancheste­r, a former leader of the state’s Transporta­tion Strategy Board, warned that study committee are usually ignored. “The reality is it was a lot of work for nothing,” Cassano said shortly before the 8:15 p.m. vote Wednesday.

A Republican-backed plan to use bonding to pay for transporta­tion investment­s also passed the committee, although Democrats widely oppose that idea.

 ?? Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Advanced Grow Labs CEO David Lipton, right, stands in a room that was modified to grow more marijuana plants.
Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Advanced Grow Labs CEO David Lipton, right, stands in a room that was modified to grow more marijuana plants.

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