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Law Washington state has legal cannabis



The Washington State Senate approved a bill on Wednesday to eventually allow marijuana businesses to engage in interstate commerce.
The measure, approved in a vote of 40-8, would give the governor the authority to enter into agreements with other legal states to permit imports and exports between licensed cannabis companies.
“It is no secret that Washington has been a leader in the cannabis industry,” Sen. Ann Rivers (R), the bill’s sponsor, said on the floor ahead of the vote. “We have taken massive steps to make sure that the product produced here is labeled well and is tested and have the highest quality. We know that legalization on the federal level is coming. We’ve seen bills introduced and it feels like it’s getting closer.”

But the state’s industry “could be left in the dust if we’re out of town and unable to take action” when federal law changes, she said. “So we can entrust our governor to look out for this industry and make sure that business can flow from our state to other states and back to us in a legal way, in a safe way and in a way that can be enforced.”

Under SB 5069, products that come from out-of-state businesses would be required to comply with Washington regulations, including those related to packaging and labeling.
However, it would only take effect under one of two conditions: 1) if there’s a federal law change “to allow for the interstate transfer of cannabis” between legal businesses, or 2) if the U.S. Department of Justice issues an opinion “allowing or tolerating” marijuana commerce across state lines.


If either of those conditions are met, state regulators would be required to provide written notice of the federal policy change, as well as any state-level “statutory changes necessary to authorize the sale, delivery, and receipt of cannabis” from out-of-state companies. Regulators would also need to adopt necessary rules for cross-border trade.
The bill had cleared required Senate committee stops last month. Meanwhile, companion legislation on the House side has advanced through committees in that chamber but has not been scheduled for floor action. The body will now receive the Senate-passed bill, however.

The Washington State legislation represents the latest state-level attempt to prepare for eventual interstate cannabis commerce, even as marijuana remains federally prohibited. California’s governor signed a similar measure last year. Before that, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D) signed interstate marijuana commerce legislation into law in 2019.
On the other side of the country, New Jersey’s Senate president filed a similar proposal last year, but it has not yet been enacted.
Back in Washington, the interstate commerce proposal is one of several cannabis and drug policy reform that lawmakers are considering this year.
On the Senate floor last week, lawmakers approved a bill, SB 5123, that would protect most job candidates in the state from being discriminated against simply for using marijuana. The legislation notes that most drug tests detect only THC metabolites, which can remain in a person’s system for weeks after using cannabis. The protection would apply only to pre-employment drug tests. Workers could still be fired for a positive cannabis test that occurs after they’re hired.

Advocates are disappointed, however, that a bill to legalize home cultivation of marijuana has stalled yet again.
Additionally, legislation to legalize psilocybin services was gutted to remove its major provisions and transformed into a measure to simply study the issue.

Lawmakers also face an impending deadline to replace Washington’s law against drug possession before it expires on July 1. Following a state Supreme Court decision in February 2021 that invalidated the state’s felony law against drug possession, lawmakers enacted a temporary criminalization policy that reclassified possession as a gross misdemeanor.
 
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Washington​

“UPDATE: HB 1563 was passed by members of the House 63 to 32. The bill was more recently approved by members of the Senate Committee on Labor & Commerce. It now heads to the Senate floor.

House Bill 1563 provides protections for medical cannabis users in Washington. If passed, qualifying patients who hold valid authorization but who have not been entered into the medical cannabis authorization database and have not been issued a recognition card will be protected from arrest.”

Except they make it so difficult to get a medical cannabis card. Originally we didn’t have legal cannabis and we could only get medical cannabis. Once the voters voted for legal recreation the state forgot about the medical cannabis patients. Now what? I would like to get a medical card. Just in case.
 
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Some owners of marijuana businesses are not happy. They are being forced to shut down. Over the last several months several farms have had to close.

In the article it talks about how cannabis can clean and absorb toxin from the soil. Very interesting.
 

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FILE - Marijuana plants for the adult recreational market that are ready for harvesting.
 

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The state of Washington will prohibit employers from making hiring decisions based on off-duty use of cannabis or positive pre-employment drug test results that find an applicant to have nonpsychoactive cannabis metabolites in their hair, blood, urine or other bodily fluids. The new law will take effect Jan. 1, 2024.
 
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37%!! I had no idea....and they wonder why the illegal gray market is still thriving. Wow...

Washington Looks To Scrap 37% Excise Tax On Medical Cannabis

Medical cannabis patients in Washington could soon no longer have to pay the steep excise tax on their treatment.​


Washington’s Senate has passed HB 1453, legislation that will exempt medical cannabis patients and designated providers from the 37% excise tax imposed on all cannabis sales.


The bill, which passed with a strong majority, will now need to be signed into law by state Governor Jay Inslee, before coming into effect 90 days after the current legislative session concludes.


Washington has been at the forefront of US cannabis reform since 1998 when medical cannabis was first legalized, later becoming the first state to legalize recreational cannabis in 2012.


However, it has also imposed one of the steepest taxes on cannabis sales, failing to differentiate between medical and recreational sales.


According to Seattle-based law firm Harris Sliwoski LLP, which first reported the news, lawmakers have now finally acknowledged that medical cannabis should be ‘treated as a medicine, not a commodity’.


Elsewhere, President Biden submitted his Fiscal Year 2025 budget request to Congress on Monday.


Marijuana Moment reports that the budget is seeking to keep legislation which prevents the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) from using federal funds from interfering with state medical cannabis initiatives, another positive development for the medical sector.


Conversely however, it is understood that contentious legislation banning adult-use cannabis sales in the city of Washington DC are set to be maintained.
 
37% tax on cannabis....even the mob loan sharks didn't have the balls to charge that much. FFS

In my state of Maryland, med patients MJ is viewed like prescription drugs and is exempt from sales tax.


Washington Governor Signs Law Exempting Medical Marijuana Patients From Paying Tax On Specified Products


Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) has signed legislation into law to exempt registered medical marijuana patients from the state’s 37 percent cannabis excise tax, which is currently one of the highest in the country. The exemption will only apply, however, to products that have been certified to higher testing standards than typical state-legal products.


HB 1453, which lawmakers sent to the governor earlier this month, would allow registered patients and caregivers to avoid the tax when purchasing products that are compliant with Department of Health (DOH) testing standards. Medical marijuana cardholders already are eligible for exemptions from sales and use taxes on cannabis, but they are not currently exempt from the state excise tax.


The tax exemption would apply only to products that are DOH-compliant, meaning the products have been tested more rigorously for safety. While manufacturers in the state are required to submit all medical and adult-use products to labs for testing, producers can voluntarily have additional testing done—to screen for heavy metals, for example—that isn’t otherwise required. Marijuana that passes the additional testing can be labeled with a DOH-developed logo.

CDC says teen pot use declined in Washington after legalization

“This bill will lead to a wider variety of DOH-compliant cannabis products on the market available to qualifying patients and designated providers, will improve program participation, and will help ease suffering,” a legislative staff summary of public testimony in support of the legislation says.


Provisions of the new law
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, sponsored by Rep. Sharon Wylie (D) and two other Democrats, are set to expire on June 30, 2029. A report by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee on the tax impacts of the change would be due in 2028.



One of the bill’s co-sponsors, Rep. Shelley Kloba (D) also sponsored a cannabis homegrow bill this session—the latest in a series of such measures introduced over the past several years—but the proposal ultimately died in committee. If passed, HB 2194 would have allowed adults 21 and older to grow up to four plants per person, with no more than 10 allowed per household. Home cultivation of marijuana without a medical marijuana card remains a felony in the state.


Kloba told Marijuana Moment last month that she’s committed to continued advocacy for the policy change and plans to introduce yet another homegrow measure next year.


“I am committed to this issue, and plan to run a bill again next session,” she said. “Every session has its own character and constraints, which so far have meant that the bill has not advanced to the Senate. But I am not giving up.”


Washington voters legalized marijuana for adult use through a ballot measure in 2012.
 
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