The House today House Bill 2, the second part of the Delaware Marijuana Control Act, the part that will regulate and tax the sale of adult recreational marijuana. House Bill 1, the bill that legalized the use and possession of adult recreational marijuana passed on Tuesday by a vote of 28-13, with Speaker Pete Schwartzkopf voting no with 12 Repubicans and three Republicans (Michael Smith, Mike Ramone and Jeff Spiegelman) voting yes with all other Democrats.
Today, House Bill 2 passed 27-13-1, with Speaker Schwartzkopf this time voting yes (figure that one out, perhaps he found God on this issue on Wednesday), and Republican Mike Ramone this time voting no. All other votes remained the same (Republicans Smith and Spiegelman voting yes with all Democrats). Democrat Stephanie Bolden was absent today due to a family medical emergency that required her to travel out of state. She had a statement read on the floor announcing her support of the bill.
House Bill 2 would create a legal framework to regulate the cultivation, sale and possession of marijuana, provide opportunities for small businesses to be licensed, and ensure people living in areas disproportionately affected by the prohibition of marijuana have equal access to this new market. The bill also contains a new framework for directing some of the state proceeds from sales and licensing to justice reform efforts.
The bill would regulate and tax marijuana in the same manner as alcohol. It would allow adults 21 and older to purchase a personal use quantity of marijuana from a licensed retail marijuana store. Under the bill, the Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Enforcement (DATE) would absorb marijuana enforcement and create a separate, administrative Office of Marijuana Control Commissioner within the Department of Safety and Homeland Security.
The legislation would allow for up to 30 retail licenses to be issued within 16 months of the bill’s effective date. It also would establish a competitive licensing process through the Office of Marijuana Control Commissioner using a scoring system that rewards applicants for paying a living wage, providing employer-paid health insurance, providing sick and paid leave to workers, hiring more full-time workers, focusing on diversity of workforce, and other factors.
HB 2 would establish a marijuana control enforcement fee assessed at point of sale, set at 15%.
The measure would direct 7% of the marijuana fee revenue to a Justice Reinvestment Fund. The proposed fund would be administered by the Criminal Justice Council and would be used to facilitate grants, contracts, services, or initiatives that focus on the following:
- Restorative justice, jail diversion, workforce development, industry-specific technical assistance or mentoring services for economically disadvantaged persons in disproportionately impacted areas.
- Addressing the underlying causes of crime, reducing drug-related arrests, and reducing the prison population in this state.
- Creating or developing technology to assist with the restoration of civil rights and expungement of criminal records.
Because this bill addresses revenue and taxation, it requires a 3/5 vote in each chamber (25 in the House).
House Bill 2 – Marijauna Regulation (Delaware Marijuana Control Act) | Currrent Status – House Passed 27-13-1. Sent to the Senate |
House Sponsors – Osienski, Longhurst, Baumbach, Dorsey Walker, Heffernan, Lynn, Minor-Brown, Morrison, Chukwuocha, Griffith, Johnson, Lambert, Moore, Neal, Phillips, Romer, Williams, Wilson-Anton | Senate Sponsors – Paradee, Hoffner, Lockman, McBride, Pinkney, Sturgeon, Townsend, Gay, Huxtable, Poore, Sokola, Walsh |
House Yes Votes – Baumbach Bolden Bush Carson Chukwuocha Cooke Dorsey-Walker Griffith Harris Heffernan Johnson Lambert Longhurst Lynn Matthews Minor-Brown Moore Morrison Neal Osienski Parker-Selby Phillips Romer Schwartzkopf Williams Wilson-Anton // Smith Spiegelman | Senate Yes Votes – |
House No Votes – Briggs King Collins Dukes Gray Hensley Hilovsky Morris Postles Ramone Short Shupe Vanderwende Yearick | Senate No Votes – |
House Absent or Not Voting – Bolden | Senate Absent or Not Voting – |
“During the past several years, we have seen numerous states, including neighboring New Jersey, legalize, regulate and sell adult recreational marijuana. They have brought much-needed revenue into their states and created good-paying jobs,” said Rep. Ed Osienski. “We’ve learned what works well for cultivation and retail and are confident that we have a quality bill that will make Delaware a safe and successful market for legal cannabis. We know Delawareans overwhelmingly want this, so it’s time we finish the legislative process and get started creating a brand-new industry in our state. I’m hopeful the Senate will quickly pass these two bills.”
“Every year we don’t pass these bills, Delaware misses out on millions in revenue. From both an economic and a criminal justice perspective, legalizing and regulating the sale of marijuana is the right thing to do,” said Sen. Trey Paradee, the lead Senate sponsor of both bills. “I will continue to serve as the lead Senate sponsor on these bills for as long as it takes to for them to become law.”
HB 2 would create new license pools for Social Equity and Microbusiness applicants. These applicants would have access to technical assistance programs, reduced fees, an adjusted points scale, and a waiver of the physical location requirement.
The new Microbusiness Applicant pool would be limited to applicants with majority ownership held by Delaware residents. These applicants would have reduced fees, though higher than Social Equity applicants, and an adjusted points scale. These applicants would have access to Cultivation and Product Manufacturing Licenses.
The bill allows municipalities to prohibit the operation of marijuana facilities within their borders through local ordinances that are not in conflict with municipal regulations enacted under this law.
Currently, recreational marijuana use is permitted in 21 states and the District of Columbia. Nearby states Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia and New York have legalized adult recreational cannabis.
HB 2 heads to the Senate for consideration.
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