State representatives this month are set to take up a bill passed by
the state Senate in February that would allow adults over 21 to
purchase and smoke the drug beginning in 2018.
The move follows a year of hearings in the Senate that lawmakers say
allowed them to closely consider appropriate limits to place on the
drug's use. The current proposal would prohibit users from growing
plants at home and ban the sale of edible products containing
marijuana extracts.
But lawmakers must act before the end of May, when the current
session ends, a deadline that may prove difficult to meet. It is
uncertain whether it has enough support in the Democratic-controlled
House to pass.
The law would impose a 25 percent tax on sales of the drug, which
would fund drug law enforcement and drug education programs.
"It makes for a much more thoughtful and measured approach," said
State Senator Jeanette White, a sponsor of the senate bill. "We got
to work out the details, we got to ask the questions first and put
the whole infrastructure in place before it happens."
Four states, Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska, as well as the
District of Columbia, have legalized marijuana through ballot
initiatives, and voters in four more states, including neighboring
Massachusetts, are to vote on legalization in November. The drug
remains illegal under federal law.
Advocates contend the push for marijuana legalization across the
nation will be boosted if the legislation is passed by the
Democratic-controlled legislature of Vermont, the home of U.S.
Senator Bernie Sanders, who is running for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Bills have been submitted in 16 other states, according to
advocates, but none have advanced as far.
"It sends an important message that legislatures don't have to be
afraid of this, it's not a third rail anymore," said Jeff Laughlin,
a 37-year-old software programmer from Barre, who supports the
measure.
Laughlin is far from alone. A February poll of 895 state residents
by Vermont Public Radio found that 55 percent of Vermonters
supported legalization, with 32 percent opposed.
More telling, a 2015 Rand Corp study commissioned by the state found
that one in eight residents already use the drug illegally, with one
in three people aged 18 to 25 doing so. The report estimated that
users spent between $125 million and $225 million on the drug in
2014.
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REALITY CHECK
The high prevalence of marijuana use in the state has some lawmakers
and even law-enforcement officials contending it's time for the
rules to catch up with reality.
"If it's one in eight, to me that tells me that we need to change,
that society for the most part is accepting it," said Windham County
Sheriff Keith Clark. "If 12 or 13 percent of the population is not
being open with law enforcement when we're out trying to investigate
serious crimes, then that is holding us back from working with our
communities."
Supporters acknowledge that the bill will have a harder path to
approval in the state's House of Representatives, where many
Republicans are wary of legalizing the drug.
"Many of our members are opposed to this proposal and I don't know
that it can be changed enough for them to change their minds," said
Representative Donald Turner, the House Republican leader. "I don't
feel there is a good argument for legalizing it at this point."
Governor Peter Shumlin, a Democrat in his final year in office,
asked lawmakers to pass the measure during this year's legislative
session, which ends in May.
Debby Haskins, executive director of opposition group Smart
Alternatives for Marijuana-Vermont, noted that Vermont, like many
U.S. states, is coping with a surge in addiction to opioid drugs,
ranging from prescription painkillers to heroin.
She said she believed health officials needed to solve that problem
before legalizing a new drug.
"The questions that keep coming up for me is, how will this make
Vermont healthier and how will this improve the quality of life? I
don't think this bill does it," Haskins said. "It's the wrong
direction for us to be heading."
(Editing by Frank McGurty and Phil Berlowitz)
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