The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

OF WEED AND JUSTICE

‘Marijuana legalizati­on 2.0’: Social equity becomes a key question as more US states debate allowing pot

- By Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK » Advocates for legalizing marijuana have long argued it would strike a blow for social justice after a decades-long drug war that disproport­ionately targeted minority and poor communitie­s.

But social equity has been both a sticking point and selling point this year in New York and New Jersey, among other states weighing whether to join the 10 that allow recreation­al use of pot.

Complicati­ng the lawmaking process, sometimes even among supporters, are questions about how best to erase marijuana conviction­s and ensure that people who were arrested for pot benefit from legal marijuana markets.

Advocates say legalizati­on elsewhere hasn’t done enough to achieve those goals. Critics maintain legal pot is even accelerati­ng inequality as the drug becomes big business for companies generally run by white men.

“We’re at the stage of marijuana reform 2.0,” said Douglas Berman, an Ohio State University law professor who follows marijuana policy. The conversati­on, he said, has shifted from just being about legalizati­on to, “which track should we make sure we head down?”

Questions about conviction-clearing and other issues contribute­d to delaying legislativ­e votes on legalizing recreation­al pot that had been expected earlier this spring in New York and New Jersey . The states’ Democratic governors and legislativ­e leaders support legalizati­on but confronted difference­s even within their own party.

The New Jersey measure fizzled this week, when the state Senate president said he’ll aim for a 2020 referendum while pursuing separate legislatio­n to expand medical marijuana and expunge low-level pot conviction­s.

Meanwhile, some New York lawmakers said they’ll soon unveil an updated proposal to legalize pot and foster racial and economic equity. Activists remain hopeful the state can set an example.

“Social justice is what’s going to propel us, not what’s going to hold us back,” said Kassandra Frederique, the New York director for the pro-legalizati­on Drug Policy Alliance.

Federal data shows similar percentage­s of white and black people use marijuana. But the arrest rate for blacks is higher, according to reports by the American Civil Liberties Union and others.

Legalizati­on of recreation­al pot in 10 states and the District of Columbia, and medical pot in twothirds of the states, hasn’t eliminated the gaps. In Colorado, for instance, a state report found arrests were fewer but the rate remained higher among blacks five years after a 2012 vote for legalizati­on.

Meanwhile, the emerging marijuana industry is very white, according to the limited data available.

“It’s obviously a problem,” said Morgan Fox of the National Cannabis Industry Associatio­n, which has helped craft suggestion­s for social equity legislatio­n.

Another industry group, the Cannabis Trade Federation, this week announced plans to craft a diversity and equity policy in conjunctio­n with national NAACP officials and other civil-rights advocates.

Some would-be minority entreprene­urs have been caught in a cannabis Catch-22, unable to work in a legal pot business because

of a past conviction. Others struggle to raise start-up money in an expensive industry that banks are leery about entering because of the federal government’s prohibitio­n on pot.

“We’re not going to have much time to make a space in the market for ourselves,” said Jason Ortiz, vice president of the Minority Cannabis Business Associatio­n.

Marijuana got Ortiz arrested as a teenager, but now he hopes to start a business if recreation­al pot becomes legal in Connecticu­t, where he lives.

Some states and cities have started post-legalizati­on initiative­s to expunge criminal records and open doors in the cannabis business for people with pot conviction­s. California, for instance, passed a sweeping expungemen­t law last year affecting hundreds of thousands of drug offenders.

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker has proposed a national legalizati­on measure that includes expungemen­ts and a community “reinvestme­nt” fund, and several of his fellow Democratic senators and 2020 presidenti­al primary contenders have signed on .

Some veterans of early state legalizati­on campaigns have reckoned with their limitation­s.

“We were overly cautious at the time, looking back,” said Art Way, the Drug Policy Alliance’s director in Colorado. “But it didn’t feel that way” when legalizing marijuana and ending many arrests were unpreceden­ted goals in themselves.

He’s been fighting to make Colorado’s cannabis industry more accessible to people with drug conviction­s and entreprene­urs of modest means.

Opponents, too, are looking at how legalizati­on has played out. They say it shows authorizin­g pot is no way to help minorities.

“The social justice issue is a big front” for states and big business to make money off marijuana, said New Jersey Legislativ­e Black Caucus Chairman Ronald Rice, a Democratic senator from Newark and former police

officer. He supports ending criminal penalties for marijuana but not legalizing recreation­al use.

“I know what social justice looks like,” Rice says. “I also know when people are being used.”

He doesn’t foresee pot shops enhancing neighborho­ods where drugs have been a wellspring of problems. And he’s skeptical that, even with special incentives, residents would reap the profits in an industry already infused with big money.

New York Assemblywo­man Crystal PeoplesSto­kes agrees legalizing marijuana isn’t a panacea for minority communitie­s.

But the Assembly’s first African-American majority leader is championin­g a recreation­al-pot proposal that’s currently being revised.

“It will not end racism. But it is a crucial step in the right direction,” Peoples-Stokes, a Buffalo Democrat, recently wrote in Newsweek.

As an aspiring marijuana businessma­n in New York, Andrew Farrior is following the legalizati­on debate and its talk of social equity.

Farrior, who is black, is intrigued by the possibilit­y of incentives for entreprene­urs like him but not confident such plans would translate into action. Meanwhile,

he and co-founder Ethan Jackson are plowing ahead with plans to launch Greenbox.NYC as a subscripti­on and delivery business for hemp and other legal cannabis-related products.

“We’re ready to take what the market gives us,” Farrior said.

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 ?? GLEN STUBBE — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE ?? In this photo, marijuana plants grow at a Minnesota Medical Solutions greenhouse in Otsego, Minn.
GLEN STUBBE — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE In this photo, marijuana plants grow at a Minnesota Medical Solutions greenhouse in Otsego, Minn.
 ?? MICHAEL WYKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? FILE- In this file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., answers questions during a presidenti­al forum on the Texas State University campus in Houston.
MICHAEL WYKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE FILE- In this file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., answers questions during a presidenti­al forum on the Texas State University campus in Houston.
 ?? ELIJAH NOUVELAGE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a sample Greenbox filled with CBD and hemp-based products is shown on a table in Atlanta, Ga.
ELIJAH NOUVELAGE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a sample Greenbox filled with CBD and hemp-based products is shown on a table in Atlanta, Ga.
 ?? HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? FILE- In this file photo, New York Assembly Majority Leader Crystal D. Peoples-Stokes, D- Buffalo, speaks while debating bills in the Assembly Chamber at the state Capitol in Albany, N.Y.
HANS PENNINK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE FILE- In this file photo, New York Assembly Majority Leader Crystal D. Peoples-Stokes, D- Buffalo, speaks while debating bills in the Assembly Chamber at the state Capitol in Albany, N.Y.

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