The News-Times

Marijuana industry could benefit state’s poor areas

- By Emily DiSalvo

HARTFORD — The marijuana debate is ablaze at the state Capitol as lawmakers consider an amendment that would help high unemployme­nt and high poverty areas reap the benefits the marijuana industry.

HB 7371 creates a system to regulate the retail sale of marijuana. The new amendment that will be pitched at a closed-door meeting Wednesday would define so-called equity applicants who would be able to apply for a license to sell or grow marijuana before any other applicant would now be defined based on census tract data and poverty, as opposed to arrest rates.

“We still have the requiremen­ts that if you have been arrested or if you have a family member that has been arrested for possession, cultivatio­n, use, distributi­on, etcetera, that qualifies you as an equity applicant,” Rep. Michael D’Agostino, D-Hamden, said. “In addition to that, if you are from an underserve­d area as defined by this data, you also can qualify as an equity applicant.”

D’Agostino, co-chair of the General Law Committee which proposed the amendment, said that these changes would not mean equities would be given out as a “blank check” for a city but rather as a highly targeted, data-driven analysis of specific neighborho­ods that could benefit from marijuana retail.

“This is data-driven but it also gets at the core issue here which is getting at communitie­s that have been not only under-served but discrimina­ted against by the war on drugs for decades,” D’Agostino said.

D’Agostino affirmed that equity applicants could not be determined by race because of the unconstitu­tionality of giving a government benefit to a specific racial group, but at a Capitol news briefing, local lawmakers and cannabis supporters acknowledg­ed how marijuana laws have unfairly targeted the black community in the past.

“Legalizati­on is about so much more than much needed revenue for this state,” Lindsay Farrell, executive director of Connecticu­t Working Families Party said at a press conference Wednesday. “The so-called war on drugs has done exactly what it was intended to do. Devastate individual­s and communitie­s of color, feed the prison-industrial complex and deepen racial and class divisions in this country.”

Farrell called for legislatio­n that not only legalized marijuana, but also gave back to the communitie­s ravaged by the war on drugs.

“It is incumbent on this legislatur­e to ensure that legalizati­on doesn’t just enrich a handful of corporatio­ns rather legalizati­on must be part of a bigger set of programs to repair the damage done to black and brown communitie­s,” Farrell said. “That means prioritizi­ng ex-offenders for ownerships and jobs in this new industry.”

D’Agostino said the second part of the general law bill, besides equities, is regulation. He said regulation­s for recreation­al marijuana should be similar to those covering medical marijuana.

“We’re actually using the regulatory process that we’ve already got– this is what we are talking about replicatin­g for the recreation­al program,” D’Agostino said. “If you’re going to have recreation­al and medical you have to have a clear division between the two. We’re talking about child safety packaging, warning labels, handouts. You name it, it’s all in there.

The bill establishe­s minimum health, safety and security requiremen­ts for retailers, manufactur­ers and producers such as the prohibitio­n of packaging that appeals to children, requiremen­ts for cannabis to be sold with a warning label and demands that all edible cannabis must not include more than 5mg of THC per serving.

The bill also includes a list of requiremen­ts which the legislatur­e will vote on in the 2020 session.

If all goes as planned, D’Agostino said Connecticu­t could see marijuana sales in the summer of 2020.

Rep. Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford, who opposes legalizati­on, said the bill changes being contemplat­ed don’t seem to be about public health issues, but how they get to a majority vote in the House and the Senate.

“They want to pick who the winner is going to be to grow marijuana in the state of Connecticu­t,” Candelora said.

He said the bill “favors convicted criminals and people who live in poorer communitie­s.”

The bill will be caucused Wednesday evening by the House. It is unclear whether these changes will be enough to sway the Democrats who are currently undecided into voting for it.

While the equities and regulation side of the legislatio­n are nearing completion, it still has to be married with the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding bill before the end of the legislativ­e session on June 5.

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