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Virginia bills to legalize recreational marijuana sales continue to advance toward enactment into law.
On Friday, lawmakers in both the House of Delegates and Senate amended and advanced the opposite chambers’ proposals on the issue.
Members of the Senate Rehabilitation and Social Services Committee voted 8-7 to advance the House-passed legislation from Del. Paul Krizek (D) by making it similar to the version that originated in their chamber, with additional amendments that the panel chair said both sponsors of the House and Senate bills agreed to include.
Later in the day, the Court of Justice Committee advanced the legislation to the Finance and Appropriations Committee in a 10-5 vote, without making additional changes.
Separately, the House Appropriations Committee voted 16-6 to approve the Senate-passed cannabis sales legislation from Sen. Lashrecse Aird (D), with a substitute that a staffer said makes seven technical changes to the language.
The latest actions come just days after the House General Laws Committee advanced the Senate bill with an amendment that largely aligned it with Krizek’s House measure. Its next stop will be the House floor.
Both House and Senate marijuana sales proposals are aimed at giving adults a legal means of buying cannabis, the possession and home cultivation of which was legalized in the state in 2021.
The legislation in both chambers has now been amended to stipulate that microbusiness licensees can cultivate, process or conduct retail sales at up to two locations instead of one, so long as they’re located within 10 miles of each other and operate under common ownership and control.
Lawmakers also revised the legislation to clarify that current medical cannabis businesses would only be able to cultivate cannabis indoors, including in secure greenhouses with a total canopy cap of 70,000 square feet. The amendment also makes it so they could not have any additional marijuana licenses beyond their medical permits with “dual-use privileges.”
Finally, the measure’s conversion fee structure was revised in a way that lets current medical marijuana businesses pay for the privilege to serve the adult-use market in three installments.
A Senate staffer said on Friday that the latest changes to the House bill also align testing requirements for medical cannabis products with those for recreational marijuana products and increase how many early marijuana licenses will go to industrial hemp processors and growers from 10 total to 20 total.
There are certain remaining major differences between the chambers’ bills that will still need to be addressed—related to the start date for legal sales and cannabis tax rates—before a final product is delivered to the governor’s desk.
Virginia lawmakers took action on multiple marijuana bills on a key deadline last week—advancing proposals to legalize cannabis sales, provide a pathway to resentencing for prior marijuana convictions and allow medical cannabis access in hospitals for seriously ill patients.
With respect to the Senate bill, members recently clashed in committee about amendments to the body’s version that would have added new penalties for illegal cannabis activity.
The amendments at issue from the Courts of Justice Committee included penalties for consumers who buy from unlicensed sources, the recriminalization of cannabis possession by people under 21 and making sales a class 1 misdemeanor for a first offense and a crime punishable by mandatory jail time for a second offense. As revised, the bill would have also raised the penalty for unlicensed cultivation to a felony punishable by up to five years in jail and made it a felony to transport with intent to distribute cannabis across state lines.
But the Finance and Appropriations Committee reversed the amendments earlier this month amid pressure from a coalition of advocacy groups that sent a letter to senators saying they undermined the “intent” of the legislation and the “will of the people” by adding criminal penalties for certain cannabis-related activity.
Despite the outstanding differences, both chambers’ commercial sales bills have largely aligned with recommendations released in December by the legislature’s Joint Commission to Oversee the Transition of the Commonwealth into a Cannabis Retail Market.
Meanwhile, certain GOP members have found themselves ideologically aligned with their Democratic colleagues throughout this legislative process, breaking with the majority of their caucus in support of creating a regulated marketplace for adults to purchase cannabis.
Since legalizing cannabis possession and home cultivation in 2021, Virginia lawmakers have worked to establish a commercial marijuana market—only to have those efforts consistently stalled under former Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R), who twice vetoed measures to enact it that were sent to his desk by the legislature.
Here are the key details of the Virginia marijuana sales legalization legislation, SB 542 and HB 642:
Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D) supports legalizing adult-use marijuana sales.
Meanwhile, House and Senate lawmakers also advanced separate legislation to provide resentencing relief for people with prior marijuana convictions.
The legislation would create a process by which people who are incarcerated or on community supervision for certain felony offenses involving the possession, manufacture, selling or distribution of marijuana could receive an automatic hearing to consider modification of their sentences.
The measure applies to people whose convictions or adjudications are for conduct that occurred prior to July 1, 2021, when a state law legalizing personal possession and home cultivation of marijuana went into effect.
Separately this week, the Virginia House passed a bill to allow patients to use medical marijuana in hospitals. It would require healthcare facilities to establish policies “to address circumstances under which an eligible patient would be permitted to use medical cannabis.”
The Senate passed differing legislation concerning the use of medical cannabis in health care facilities earlier this month.
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Meanwhile, the Virginia House this month approved a bill to protect the rights of parents who use marijuana in compliance with state law.
Under the proposal from Del. Nadarius Clark (D), possession of use of cannabis by a parent or guardian on its own “shall not serve as a basis to deem a child abused or neglected unless other facts establish that such possession or consumption causes or creates a risk of physical or mental injury to the child.”
“A person’s legal possession or consumption of substances authorized under [the state’s marijuana law] alone shall not serve as a basis to restrict custody or visitation unless other facts establish that such possession or consumption is not in the best interest of the child,” the text of the bill, HB 942, states.
Separately, the Virginia Department of Labor and Industry recently published a new outlining workplace protections for cannabis consumers.
Photo courtesy of Brian Shamblen.
Kyle Jaeger is Marijuana Moment’s Sacramento-based managing editor. He’s covered drug policy for more than a decade—specializing in state and federal marijuana and psychedelics issues at publications that also include High Times, VICE and attn. In 2022, Jaeger was named Benzinga’s Cannabis Policy Reporter of the Year.
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