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New Mexico’s Senate failed to hear a marijuana legalization bill as time ticked down to the close of the legislative session on Saturday. With just hours left before lawmakers adjourned, however, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D) said she’ll call them back soon for a special session to consider the issue of ending cannabis prohibition.

“We’re going to have a special session in a week or so, and we’re going to get cannabis because I am not going to wait another year,” the governor said in comments to the Sandoval County Democratic Party on Saturday. “We’re going to win it and it’s going to have the social justice aspects that we know have to be in a package.”

The governor’s office said that as lawmakers continued through a session that stretched past midnight, Lujan Grisham “has had very productive conversations with leadership on both sides about a path forward on legalized adult-use cannabis.”

“It’s important enough and we’re close enough that the governor firmly believes it will be worth an extra effort to close the deal,” the statement said.

The legalization measure, HB 12, which passed the House of Representatives last month, was repeatedly delayed during the week amid a frantic push by lawmakers to make amendments to the nearly 200-page bill. While the full Senate was scheduled to hear the legislation Friday, it became clear over the course of the day that wouldn’t happen.

The legislature officially came to a close at noon Saturday. To make that deadline, the Senate would have had to pass the measure, then the full House would have needed to sign off on the Senate’s changes. If the House had rejected those amendments, the two chambers would’ve formed a conference committee to hammer out a deal.

“Everyone’s first preference is that this gets done and done right by 12 p.m. tomorrow,” said the Friday night statement from the governor’s office. “But there are a lot of priorities left to be heard, and only so many hours left, and legislators working very hard over long hours to move priorities.”

In a joint statement issued minutes after the governor’s announcement, the bill’s two lead sponsors, Reps. Javier Martínez (D) and Andrea Romero (D), said they “welcome any avenue” to pass the bill this year.

“We need to legalize adult-use cannabis tonight or in a special session,” the sponsors said. “House Bill 12 puts forward New Mexico’s best opportunity to establish a multi-million-dollar industry with a framework that prioritizes social justice and equal opportunity for our communities. The governor has made a commitment to sign a bill that represents our shared principles.”

Statement from Reps. @JavierForNM & @ARomero_NM, sponsors of #HB12 cannabis legalization:

"We need to legalize adult-use cannabis tonight or in a special session. It’s now up to the Senate to have a vote. House Bill 12 puts forward New Mexico's… 1/3 #nmleg#nmpol

— NM House Democrats (@NMHouseDems) March 20, 2021


The Governor has made a commitment to sign a bill that represents our shared principles, and we welcome any avenue, to do so. New Mexico is ready." 3/3

— NM House Democrats (@NMHouseDems) March 20, 2021


On Saturday, after the session’s end, Lujan Grisham said at a press conference that she feels “very confident that this legislative body is going to figure out all of the issues that still need a little bit of effort and debate, and we’re going to be ready to go.”

“I feel very confident that we are going to be able to announce adult-use cannabis in the very near future in New Mexico,” she said, adding that the special session could begin on or around March 31.

@GovMLG on upcoming special session for legalizing marijuana: pic.twitter.com/mij8gFBd1U

— Rachel Knapp (@RachelKnappNews) March 20, 2021


“Legalized adult-use cannabis is one of the best moves we can make in our work to build a bona fide 21st century economy in New Mexico,” the governor said in a press release. “I believe legalization will be one of the largest job-creation programs in state history, driving entrepreneurial opportunities statewide for decades to come. I look forward to continuing to work with lawmakers to get the job done and done right.”

Legalized adult-use cannabis is one of the best moves we can make to help build a bona fide 21st century economy in New Mexico.

We are very close. And we will finish the job. New Mexico is ready.

My full statement on the special session: pic.twitter.com/RUlusTFnRH

— Michelle Lujan Grisham (@GovMLG) March 20, 2021


Emily Kaltenbach, the senior director for resident states and New Mexico for the Drug Policy Alliance, and who served as a consultant to the bill’s sponsors, cheered the governor’s move to extend the discussion into special session.

“While we are disappointed that New Mexicans will have to wait a little bit longer to reap the benefits and justice cannabis legalization will provide—especially to Hispanic/Latinx, Black, Native and Indigenous communities, who have been disproportionately impacted by prohibition—after the legislature failed to pass House Bill 12 this session, we applaud Governor Lujan Grisham for acknowledging this cannot wait and indicating she will take up legalization in a special session,” she said.

NORML’s state policies manager, Carly Wolf, stressed that a failure to legalize cannabis this year would mean continued consequences for vulnerable communities.

“Lawmakers, for the moment, have once again failed to deliver common sense marijuana policy reform for the people of New Mexico — an overwhelming majority of whom support legalizing cannabis for adults,” she said. “In the interim, thousands of their constituents, disproportionately their constituents of color, will continue to be saddled with criminal records and the lifelong penalties and stigma associated with it.”

The latest official version of the bill was approved early Thursday morning by the Senate Judiciary Committee after a contentious late-night hearing, but the legislation is likely to change significantly by the time it comes to a vote in a special session. As the regular session’s end approached, journalists and lawmakers tweeted out reports of efforts to overhaul its core components.

“For those following marijuana legalization and assuming I was stalling the process, know that I’ve learned we will see a substantially rewritten bill today with fewer than 24 hours and zero committee on what it might be,” posted Sen. Joe Cervantes (D), the Judiciary chairman and a vocal opponent of the bill who said it was too poorly written to become law.

Around 3 today I received a rewrite of the legal marijuana bill from sponsors. Check version 220993.2. Much better writing and correcting many obvious errors. The bill has been out of SJC committee for two days, and so it is now up up to the full Senate.

— Sen. Joe Cervantes (@SenJoeCervantes) March 20, 2021


Cervantes tore into the bill’s language during the panel hearing a day earlier but declined to discuss possible changes with sponsors during that meeting. “I just don’t have the time tonight to do this with you,” he told them. “You all can do this tonight, tomorrow, and work on it harder. And you don’t need me to do that. If people were reading this bill carefully, they would realize that it’s wrong.”

In a tweet on Friday night, Cervantes again criticized the sponsors for not being able to write “an intelligible bill” in his view.

Martinez, for his part, replied by saying that he respects the chairman but asked him to “stop demeaning our work.”

But please 🙏🏽 stop demeaning our work. HB12 is a good bill. This has been a labor of love for the past few years. Now that the bill is effectively dead, we’ll go back & rewrite, taking all of your good feedback. We look forward to seeing you in SJC again soon. Thank you, Senator.

— Rep. Javier Martínez (@JavierForNM) March 20, 2021


Around 2:00 PM on Friday, reporter Andy Lyman of the New Mexico Political Report said multiple sources had told him of plans to remove HB 12’s section that would expunge past cannabis crimes “and somehow incorporate it into” a separate House bill about criminal records. That legislation was also ultimately not considered by the Senate prior to the end of the session.

By 7:00 PM, Lyman tweeted that he was hearing “that cannabis legalization, as of now, will not pass the Senate and may not even be heard by the end of the session.”

Minutes later, Sen. Cliff Pirtle (R), who introduced a competing legalization measure this session, told Marijuana Moment the bill wasn’t done just yet. “Working hard to fix it,” he said in a text message. “We have time.”

It's worth noting that efforts to broker a deal are ongoing. As @SenCandelaria told me recently: "An hour is a lifetime in legislative time." #nmleg

— Daniel Chacon (@danieljchacon) March 20, 2021


Pirtle, the ranking Republican in the Senate Judiciary Committee, had introduced a committee amendment earlier in the week that would have replaced the full text of HB 12 with language from his own measure, but the panel rejected that move.

At 8:30 PM, a reporter for The Daily Lobo tweeted that he asked HB 12 sponsor Romero about the status of the bill. “I wish I knew,” the representative replied. “I’m watching the clock tick like everyone else.”

As of early Saturday morning, HB 12 was still on the Senate’s calendar, although Sen, Jacob Candelaria (D), who sponsored yet another cannabis legalization bill this year, tweeted, “I do not expect recreational cannabis to pass this regular session, due in part to @NMHouseGOP scorched earth tactics to shut down the people’s house.”

“Special Session here we come,” he said.

13-ish hours till Sine Die.

I do not expect recreational cannabis to pass this regular session, due in part to @NMHouseGOP scorched earth tactics to shut down the people’s house.

Special Session here we come. #nmleg#nmpolpic.twitter.com/70Dn8nf70d

— jacobcandelaria (@SenCandelaria) March 20, 2021


House Republicans appeared to take a temporary victory lap of sorts, tweeting that the governor “has FAILED to get her showpiece marijuana bill across the line.”

“She now says she will call us back next week,” the caucus said.

UNBELIEVABLE. After spending $2 million on a fence blocking YOU from the Roundhouse for a year- @GovMLG has FAILED to get her showpiece marijuana bill across the line. She now says she will call us back next week. Taxpayers, the Gov's agenda is on your dime. #nmpol#nmleg

— NM House Republicans (@NMHouseGOP) March 20, 2021


Legislative leaders settled on HB 12 from among a handful of legalization proposals introduced this session by both Democrats and Republicans. Over the course of the past several weeks, the bills’ sponsors have tried to unify the conflicting proposals and incorporate feedback from colleagues.

Cervantes has repeatedly framed the proposal as “all about money,” a critique he echoed at the committee hearing. “I’m sure the big guys have written this bill. I wasn’t born yesterday,” he said.


The chairman again complained about last-minute changes in a tweet on Saturday morning.

For those following marijuana, latest bill sent to me at 8:12 a.m.

— Sen. Joe Cervantes (@SenJoeCervantes) March 20, 2021


Pirtle, the Republican who brought a separate legalization bill this session, told Marijuana Moment that “it seems like the focus of House Bill 12 is social justice and not how to properly regulate cannabis.”

The bill has three major components, lead sponsor Martínez said at the most recent committee hearing: protecting existing medical marijuana patients, ensuring racial justice in how cannabis is legalized and establishing smart regulatory and tax systems.

“Is this bill perfect? Probably not,” he acknowledged. “Should this bill move forward, should we legalize cannabis in New Mexico this year, I can assure you that we will all be up here next year, making tweaks. That’s the way it should be … because good policy and good law should be evolving, especially when we attempt to do something as big as this.”

During the Senate Judiciary meeting, lawmakers amended the bill with changes to licensing rules, tax collection and criminal justice procedures, among other provisions. The revisions would also delay the proposed launch of commercial sales to April 2022. Sales would initially begin at existing medical marijuana dispensaries and newly licensed small businesses, then expand later in the year to all new licensees.

Pirtle on Saturday said he plans to “work with Democratic leaders and the governor” on crafting a revised legalization bill during the upcoming special session.

I introduced a carefully crafted, cannabis bill that could have passed. It didn’t receive a timely hearing and it was ignored until the complications in the House Bill surfaced. I plan to work with Democratic leaders and the Governor on legislation that addresses concerns. #nmleg

— Cliff Pirtle (@CliffPirtle) March 20, 2021


—Marijuana Moment is already tracking more than 900 cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.—

Polling indicates New Mexico voters are ready for the policy change. A survey released in October found a strong majority of residents are in favor of legalization with social equity provisions in place, and about half support the decriminalization of drug possession more broadly.

Say it again: New 👏 Mexico 👏 is 👏 ready. 👏

Legalize adult-use cannabis with social justice and equity. #nmpol#nmleg@JavierForNM@DPANewMexico

— Andrea Romero (@ARomero_NM) March 20, 2021


Gov. Lujan Grisham, meanwhile, included cannabis legalization as part of her 2021 legislative agenda and has repeatedly talked about the need to legalize as a means to boost the economy, especially amid the coronavirus pandemic. She said during a State of the State address in January that “a crisis like the one we’ve experienced last year can be viewed as a loss or as an invitation to rethink the status quo—to be ambitious and creative and bold.”

Additional pressure to end cannabis prohibition this year is coming from neighboring Arizona, where sales officially launched in January after voters approved a legalization ballot initiative last year. To New Mexico’s north is Colorado, one of the first states to legalize for adult use.

Cannabis is also expected to be legalized across the southern border in Mexico, with lawmakers facing a Supreme Court mandate to end prohibition by the end of April.

Before last year’s failed effort, New Mexico’s House in 2019 approved a legalization bill that included provisions to put marijuana sales mostly in state-run stores, but that measure died in the Senate. Later that year, Lujan Grisham created a working group to study cannabis legalization and issue recommendations.

In May of last year, the governor signaled she was considering actively campaigning against lawmakers who blocked her legalization bill in 2020. She also said that she’s open to letting voters decide on the policy change via a ballot referendum if lawmakers can’t send a legalization bill to her desk.

Marijuana Banking Bill Reintroduced In Congress With Broad Bipartisan Support From More Than 100 Lawmakers

 
 
 

A New Mexico Senate panel advanced two competing marijuana legalization bills at a Tuesday hearing as lawmakers work to merge a handful of proposals into a single measure ahead of a legislative deadline later this month.

The Senate Tax, Business and Transportation committee unanimously passed a Republican-led Senate bill to legalize and regulate marijuana for adults 21 and older at the hearing. In a separate 7–4 vote, the panel also advanced an amended version of House legislation approved by that chamber late last month.

The NM Senate Tax, Business & Transportation Committee voted to do-pass CS/CS/HB 12/a (7-4). The bill enacts the Cannabis Regulation Act, a plan for regulation and licensing of commercial #cannabis production/distribution/sale/consumption by people 21+. #nmleg#nmpol#nmgovpic.twitter.com/1lnJ22TRFs

— NM Senate Democrats (@NMSenateDems) March 10, 2021


Two other Senate proposals, SB 363 and SB 13, which the panel considered during an earlier hearing, were left by the wayside with the consent of their sponsors as lawmakers continue rolling the various bills into one.

Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth (D), a member of the panel, voted in favor of both remaining bills, HB 12 and SB 288, acknowledging the need for lawmakers to continue ironing out the proposals’ remaining differences.

“I’m moving them both forward because I think the discussion continues,” he said. “I don’t want there to be a sense that we’re picking a bill, one over the other.”

The Senate Tax, Business & Transportation Committee voted to do-pass CS/*SB 288 (10-0). The bill would enacts the Cannabis Regulation Act, decriminalizing commercial cannabis for nonmedical adult use and creates a regulatory and tax structure. #nmpol#nmleg#nmgov#cannabisbillpic.twitter.com/XHnORBhUR8

— NM Senate Democrats (@NMSenateDems) March 9, 2021


Both measures now proceed to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Rep. Javier Martínez (D), a lead sponsor of HB 12, said at the hearing there’s “plenty of time” to pass legalization before the legislative session ends on March 20.

“The clock is ticking on the session,” Martínez said, “but I believe we still have plenty of time to come together to a compromise that works for all.”

The bills overlap significantly at this point in the process, although some differences still remain. Changes to both measures at Tuesday’s hearing brought them even closer together.

A substitute SB 288 adopted by the panel, for example, removes language that would allow municipalities to opt out of allowing licensed cannabis businesses to operate locally, a change that sponsor Sen. Cliff Pirtle (R) said would prevent the regulatory patchwork that currently exists in the state around alcohol sales. That provision mirrors HB 12, which would also forbid local governments from banning marijuana businesses within their boundaries.

Changes to SB 288 also added language to enable Native American tribes located within New Mexico to participate in the new industry and included a provision to allow the state to participate in cannabis commerce with other legal states if and when federal prohibition is lifted.

Another change removed a requirement that businesses be located at least one mile apart, as the measure already allows municipalities to make those decisions themselves through local zoning rules.

Meanwhile, the panel adopted 16 pages of amendments to HB 12. While most of the changes were minor clean-up adjustments, lawmakers also modified some key licensing rules, for example by increasing the plant limit for small, so-called microbusinesses to 200 plants, up from 99 plants in prior versions of the bill. Another change would expand the types of cannabis businesses that could add social consumption areas.

Martínez, sponsor of the House bill, accepted the Senate panel’s changes “in the spirit of collaboration.”

“I think that the House of Representatives and the experts that we brought to the table have come up with a really solid framework,” he said. “In the spirit of collaboration, and the spirit of compromise and in the spirit of moving this very important piece of legislation forward, we will accept this as a friendly amendment.”

Much of the committee discussion centered on the proposed structure of the commercial market, specifically whether state regulators would be able to limit the number of plants produced under a cultivation license.

SB 288 would forbid the state from setting a cap on plants, which Pirtle said would better allow legal stores to compete with illegal sales. “It’s important to me to ensure that we let the free market determine how much cannabis can be produced,” he said. “Since the goal is to put the illicit market out of business, we do want the price to be as cheap as possible.”

Under HB 12 as amended, meanwhile, state regulators would be able to limit producers—as well as temporarily halt the issuance of new cultivation licenses—but only after an advisory committee determination that existing supply threatens the economic viability of the industry, according to an explanation from Linda Trujillo, superintendent of the state Department of Regulation and Licensing.

“That was our way of negotiating between no plant count, and a line-in-the-sand plant count,” Trujillo said.

Marijuana Moment is already tracking more than 800 cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.—

Other changes made to HB 12 would add a $50-per-plant licensing fee and clarify that licensed growers could not sell directly to consumers, only wholesale to other cannabis businesses.

Wirth acknowledged the licensing and plant caps are “going to be the big issue at the next stop.” A number of other members of the panel agreed, noting concerns such as ensuring equitable access to the industry and preventing large out-of-state players from dominating the market.

How the Senate Judiciary Committee decides to move forward on the two bills could set up different timelines on passage. As the Santa Fe Reporter pointed out last week, passing the House bill would likely be the swifter path.

Because HB 12 has already passed the House, a Senate-passed version of the bill would go to a concurrence committee with members of both the House and Senate before moving to Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D). Under the current version of the bill, legal sales would begin March 1 of next year.

If Senators pass SB 288, on the other hand, that measure will first have to move through a series of House committees and be approved on the House floor—likely a slower process that could run up against the end of the legislative session.

For her part, Lujan Grisham has repeatedly talked about the need to legalize as a means to boost the economy, especially amid the coronavirus pandemic. She said during a State of the State address last month that “a crisis like the one we’ve experienced last year can be viewed as a loss or as an invitation to rethink the status quo—to be ambitious and creative and bold.”

The governor also included cannabis legalization as part of her 2021 legislative agenda that she released in January and said in a recent interview that she’s “still really optimistic about cannabis” this session.

That optimism is bolstered by the fact that several anti-legalization Democrats, including the Senate president pro tem and the Finance Committee chair, were ousted by progressive primary challengers last year.

Additional pressure to end cannabis prohibition this year is coming from neighboring Arizona, where voters approved legalization in November and where sales officially launched in January.

New Mexico shares another border with Colorado, one of the first states to legalize for adult use. Cannabis is also expected to be legalized across the southern border in Mexico, with lawmakers facing a Supreme Court mandate to end prohibition by April.

Last year, a bill to legalize cannabis for adult use passed one New Mexico Senate committee only to be rejected in another before the end of the 30-day session.

Earlier, in 2019, the House approved a legalization bill that included provisions to put marijuana sales mostly in state-run stores, but it died in the Senate. Later that year, Lujan Grisham created a working group to study cannabis legalization and issue recommendations.

Polling indicates that voters are ready for the policy change. A survey released in October found that a strong majority of New Mexico residents are in favor of legalization with social equity provisions in place, and about half support decriminalizing drug possession more broadly.

Last May, the governor signaled that she was considering actively campaigning against lawmakers who blocked her legalization bill in 2020. She also said that she’s open to letting voters decide on the policy change via a ballot referendum if lawmakers can’t send a legalization bill to her desk.

Mexican Committees Approve Revised Marijuana Legalization Bill, With Floor Vote Expected Wednesday

Photo courtesy of Rick Proctor

 
 
 

Democratic and Republican gubernatorial candidates in Ohio and New Mexico clashed on the issue of marijuana legalization during televised debates on Wednesday night.

In Ohio, Democrat Richard Cordray said for the first time that he would support an initiative to legalize cannabis if it were put before the state’s voters.

Distancing himself from a “deeply flawed” and “monopolistic” cannabis legalization proposal that Ohioans resoundingly defeated in 2015, he said he would support placing the issue back on the ballot, would vote yes and would implement it if passed.

“When it goes to the ballot I will cast my vote yes to legalize it.”

Republican Mike DeWine, currently the state’s attorney general, took a different stance on ending prohibition, which he claimed has been an “absolute disaster” in Colorado.

“I’m against it,” he said. “I will veto it.”

Cordray, a former director of the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, shot back, accusing his GOP opponent of “living in the past” on cannabis issues.

“Marijuana has been legalized in numerous states now and they’re working through these issues,” he said of DeWine’s concerns about the impacts of legalization.


But the Republican criticized Cordray for at first not directly responding to the question of whether he would support ending prohibition and instead pivoting to how he would implement it if approved by voters.

“You’re really a profile in courage,” DeWine said. “You’re not going to take a position at all on recreational marijuana? I will.”

That’s when Cordray revealed his personal support for legalization.

Earlier in the debate, the two candidates butted heads over a current state ballot measure going before voters in November that would reclassify some felony drug possession crimes as misdemeanors with no jail time.

Cordray said he supported “more efforts for treatment in the community and less emphasis on jailing drug users,” while DeWine argued the measure would “put a star on Ohio and every drug dealer in the country will come here.”

.@MikeDeWine is against legalization of recreational marijuana. #Colorado has seen an increase in use among young people. #OHGovDebate

— Mike DeWine (@MikeDeWine) September 19, 2018


New Mexico gubernatorial contenders also debated marijuana legalization on Wednesday evening.

Democrat Michelle Lujan Grisham, currently a congresswoman, voiced her support for ending the prohibition of cannabis, which she said is “not a gateway drug.”

Arguing that legalization would bring “hundreds of millions of dollars to New Mexico’s economy,” Lujan Grisham said she would be “inclined to sign” a bill as long as it effectively regulates edibles, fosters workplace safety, limits underage consumption and protects the current medical cannabis program.

“The states that have gone to recreational marijuana have been very clear that it’s an economic boost for their states.”

On the other hand, Republican Steve Pearce, also a member of Congress, opposes legalization, which he argued would make it harder for people to be productive citizens.

“I do not see how putting one more obstacle in front of people helps them get out of poverty and get back on their feet, so I’ve never been supportive of legalizing recreational marijuana,” he said.

When it comes to medical marijuana, Lujan Grisham called cannabis a “very powerful tool for a variety of serious medical conditions.”

Pearce, for his part, claimed that while he was “suspicious of that for many years,” he has “friends who I’ve known my whole life and they will tell me what it’s done for them.”

“So I have come to terms that medical marijuana—fine, we will do it,” he said.

But the Democratic congresswoman called him out for actually opposing measures on Capitol Hill that would have increased military veterans’ access to medical cannabis.

Pearce also voted three times against amendments to shield state medical marijuana programs from federal interference, as well as a broader proposal to protect recreational laws.

Lujan Grisham voted for all of the amendments.

As governor, I will work to legalize recreational cannabis in a way that protects medical cannabis patients’ access, prioritizes public safety, and generates state revenues. https://t.co/OFDTxs3y1w#nmpol#NMGovDebatepic.twitter.com/eVL2Sa3zFH

— MichelleLujanGrisham (@Michelle4NM) September 20, 2018


Her lieutenant governor running mate, Howie Morales, also chimed in on cannabis issues on Wednesday via a tweet.

Michelle will work with all stakeholders to expand medical cannabis to prevent and treat opioid addiction, and move to a responsible legalization program in New Mexico that protects public safety and our children. #nmpol#NMGovDebate

— Howie Morales (@Morales4LtGovNM) September 20, 2018


 
 
 

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