Cannabis regulatory reform bill fails to advance in spring legislative
session
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[June 01, 2023]
By NIKA SCHOONOVER
Capitol News Illinois
nschoonover@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A proposed cannabis reform bill won’t get further
consideration until at least the General Assembly’s fall veto session
after stakeholders failed to come to an agreement during the spring
session’s final stretch.
Rep. La Shawn Ford, a Chicago Democrat and the bill’s sponsor, told
Capitol News Illinois last week that Senate Bill 1559 didn’t pass in
part due to disagreements around delta-8 THC, a synthetic psychoactive
substance typically manufactured from hemp-derived CBD.
“We need to regulate it, make it safe, make sure that it’s taxed and
treat it just like cannabis,” Ford said in an interview.
But advocates for the cannabis industry are pushing for a full ban. Ford
said he refused to rewrite the bill to include a ban “without any
serious dialogue from the public and from the state regulators.”
Delta-8, found in small traces of hemp and cannabis plants, is an easily
accessible substance that can be purchased in licensed dispensaries but
also in convenience stores that otherwise are prohibited from selling
cannabis. Unlike the more well-known form of THC, delta-8 is often
derived from CBD and causes a much milder high. But concerns over the
substance’s safety have arisen across the country because it remains
unregulated, and consumers of delta-8 have gotten sick after
consumption.
On the federal level, the substance’s legal standing is murky. In
response to a cannabis industry attorney's inquiry about the substance’s
legal status, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration issued a letter
in February saying delta-8 should be considered an illegal controlled
substance because it can only be obtained synthetically.
But last year the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that
delta-8 is generally legal because is derived from the cannabis plant,
classifying it as hemp.
While the substance’s legal status remains uncertain, several states
have moved to regulate or ban the drug because of safety concerns. The
FDA received 104 reports of adverse events in patients who consumed
delta-8 THC products between Dec. 1, 2020, and Feb. 28, 2022. In 55
percent of those reports, the individual needed some type of medical
intervention.
Pamela Althoff, executive director of the Cannabis Business Association
of Illinois, said she supports a ban because, in addition to its
synthetic nature, it could be detrimental to the industry.
“To allow those types of products to proliferate undermines the cannabis
industry,” Althoff said in an interview. “It will have a devastating
effect on any new license holder who was trying to establish themselves,
either from a cultivation craft grow side or from opening up a
dispensary.”
Althoff added that her association will support regulating the substance
eventually but wants to ban the drug immediately while regulation
measures are finalized.
Peter Contos, deputy director of the Cannabis Equity Illinois Coalition,
said they’ve been pushing for lawmakers to regulate delta-8 for over two
years but they’re opposed to banning the substance.
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Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, is
pictured on the House floor. He is the sponsor of a cannabis
regulatory bill that failed to pass in the recently concluded spring
legislative session. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
“This needs to be regulated,” Contos said. “A ban is not going to get us
any closer to the solution and it’s really key that we regulate this
with intention and care so that we can ultimately expand this
industry…but also ensure that products are safe and tested.”
Ford argued that banning it while trying to decriminalize cannabis and
reform the industry would be hypocritical.
“If we ban it the way cannabis was banned, then we’re going to have a
new crop of people that’s going to be entered into our criminal justice
system,” Ford said.
Ford said negotiations would continue on the wide-ranging bill that was
only introduced on what was scheduled to be the final day of the spring
legislative session.
The measure as drafted would address multiple areas of the state’s
burgeoning cannabis industry, including reforms for craft growers,
dispensary operations and licensing procedures. The stalled bill did not
include any language on delta-8.
Among other things, the bill would have increased canopy space for craft
growers from 5,000 square feet to 14,000 square feet. That measure, Ford
said, could help those businesses grow to be more competitive in the
industry.
Ron Holmes, a lobbyist for CBAI, said in a committee hearing that
they’re concerned about expanding the allowed amount of space for craft
growers.
“What we’re going to have is scenario where we let 14,000-square-foot
out the door for every license holder that exists in the state and that
we’re going to have no room for new licensees,” Holmes said.
The measure also would have allowed dispensaries to operate drive-thru
windows and offer curbside pick-up services, making sure they prioritize
medical patients. It also would have amended licensing procedures by
allowing conditional adult-use dispensary license holders an extra year
to find a physical address.
Two smaller cannabis-related measures were able to pass this session,
including a measure in the budget implementation bill that allows the
Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to extend
the deadline for conditional adult-use dispensary license holders to
secure a physical location and become operational. The current deadline
is July 1, but once Gov. JB Pritzker signs the budget package, the new
deadline will be July 2023 – a 540-day extension.
Additionally, beginning Jan. 1, 2023, calendar year, cannabis businesses
will be allowed to deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses from
their income for state tax purposes.
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