Credit: Luke Eastman
Gov. Phil Scott has until the end of the day next Wednesday to decide whether to sign into law a bill that would legalize possession of marijuana.

Senate Secretary John Bloomer delivered the bill, S.22, to the governor’s office Thursday morning. By law, the governor has five days to respond. Saturday counts but Sunday doesn’t.

The first-term Republican governor indicated Wednesday that he doesn’t know whether he will sign the bill, veto it or allow it to become law without his signature.

He said that while he is not philosophically opposed to legalizing possession of marijuana, he has concerns about highway safety and youth access to the drug. “I have to do what I think is right for the state throughout from a public safety standpoint,” he said.

The bill would legalize possession of up to an ounce of marijuana and home-growing of up to two mature plants per household starting in July 2018. It would not legalize the sale or commercial growing of marijuana.

Those for and against legalization have been lobbying Scott hard. A group of medical professionals and others held a Statehouse news conference Thursday urging him to veto the bill.

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Terri Hallenbeck was a Seven Days staff writer covering politics, the Legislature and state issues from 2014 to 2017.

16 replies on “Marijuana Legalization Bill Hits Vermont Governor’s Desk”

  1. Our state would be demonstrably safer if marijuana was legal and alcohol and tobacco were outlawed.

    Funny how those claiming to be concerned about safety are working so hard to protect the lucrative sales and sales tax on alcohol and tobacco. I guess people dying from alcoholism, alcohol-related car crashes, and lung cancer isn’t as unsafe as having the sky fall upon us when weed is legal everywhere but in Vermont.

  2. Penelope is right. Talk to most law enforcement officers individually, as well as medical professionals, and the majority will tell you alcohol abuse is more serious than marijuana is, or would be. Yet we promote alcohol consumption tirelessly, at almost every public venue, restaurant, or event. Even glorify it in advertisements, TV shows, and film.

    When people imbibe, they become obnoxious, over-confident, start fights, are often uncontrollable, they drive fast and out of control, and act recklessly. When people get high, they become mellow, sometimes a little paranoid, and often recognize they are impaired and unable to drive. And when they do drive, which they shouldn’t do, of course, they drive very slow. The effects on the brain and metabolism of the body between alcohol and marijuana are totally different.

    Allowing alcohol consumption…actually even promoting it…while prohibiting marijuana has never mede any sense. And the Legislature is finally recognizing it.

  3. Regulated alcohol provides responsible alcohol drinkers as well as addicts with an important public health benefit: nobody goes blind or dies from bathtub gin.

    Both responsible users and those who have addiction problems deserve pure unaldulterated drugs. The only way to achieve this is to regulate the marketplace and sell drugs at their fair market value. Otherwise, criminals will take over the marketplace and the blood they shed will be on the hands of prohibitionists.

  4. Let’s reduce the number of youth using drugs, improve roadway safety and address the devastating effects of widespread opioid abuse.

    Sign S.22.

  5. Legalizing would be more helpful than harmful. People would stop getting locked up over having or possessing a small amount of marijuana. But I also believe that if it’s legalized we need to come up with a way to regulate and tax it. Allow dispensaries. Etc. I understand the wanting to make sure that it’s done properly and dealt with properly.

  6. Cannabis prohibition assures that children of any age will have easy access to cannabis because criminals don’t discriminate. Cannabis prohibition assures that the hundred billion dollars spent yearly in the United States for recreational Cannabis will go straight into the pockets of organized crime and criminals. It is absolutely clear that cannabis is far safer than alcoholic beverages or tobacco which together are killers responsible for over 500,000 deaths per year according to the Center for Disease Control.

  7. I want to know more about “A group of medical professionals and others held a Statehouse news conference Thursday urging him to veto the bill.” Holy sh*t what is the opposition saying? I need to know!!! I want to be able to know what sort of nonsense needs to be proved to be nonsense. I’m happy to take on the burden of proof but for petesake give me a link to this public news conference please!!!!

  8. The real reason that there is opposition to marijuana legalization is the loss of funds that the illegal status guarantees those in the present illegal trade. Somebody is going to lose a lot of money if it is made legal: those who presently grow it and smuggle it into Vermont, those law enforcement folks who interdict, the legal defense system that defends people arrested, the forfeiture profits, the prison for profit people who demand a quota of prisoners from the state, and big pharma that sell pills for everything the marijuana is better for treating, and the alcohol and tobacco folks. These are the obstacles for legalization… not concern for the kids or about highway safety. It is “how will the loss of revenue for the status quo be made up”. You can’t make an omelet without breaking few eggs.

  9. Wouldn’t legalizing marijuana as proposed in this bill hurt the medical marijuana business? As of now, the only way a person can possess a small amount of marijuana is by obtaining it through the medical marijuana industry. Should this bill pass, the medical marijuana industry doesn’t become as necessary.

  10. Sign the bill already…! Geez… There couldn’t be a safer political position to take than supporting cannabis… it is more popular than all the politicians’ favorability ratings combined. No brainer…

  11. The obstructionist/prohibitionist rants never change. So we get to play Whack-A-Mole – they make a negative claim about Cannabis or its use, we cite research to refute their claims, they ignore valid peer reviewed evidence, and they repeat ad infinitum.

  12. Legalize it, don’t legalize it.. Not going to change one thing about those who partake in the great state of Vermont. It’s already decriminalized. We can posses up to 1oz without fear of jail time. Those who partake are already partaking and guess what. The sky hasn’t fallen and children aren’t hurt. It’s easier today, on the black market, to get weed than it is for a minor to buy alcohol. That should be your concern.

    The fear here is not weed, but that people will stop using the far more dangerous product of alochol and tobacco should cannabis be legalized. This is what these corrupt politicians are defending. They don’t give two hoots about kids.

  13. Colorado ER Doctor Karen Randall, MD:” we have opened pandoras box.. this is a nightmare. The marijuana industry does everything they can to beat us down and they have the funds to do it. Since MJ business started here, they quote they brought 1300 jobs to the area. HOWEVER, . all low paying, minimum wage jobs, so [have they] really improved our economy. Certainly, no improvement in schools, police force or ability to provide medical care. The providers here are beaten daily. My hospital has 300 or so beds .. we have had 120% occupancy for the last 2.5 years. Prior to that, no waits for beds, but now.. Along with the marijuana, came increase in opiates and meth. Cartels are not stupid, they have people here and they sell the heroin and meth cheaper than the marijuana. ..all the people who have come here on a fixed (usually some type of disability) income, spend what they can and then turn towards the cheaper substances (meth/heroin) at the end of the month…ER daily overdoses. ICU has had at a minimum 2 patients/day who are ill secondary to drug related complication. Every shift Some young person, addicted to drugs, new to Colorado, wanting more services (medicaid, assistance, food stamps, housing, etc). .Every time we publish the stats, the marijuana folks are there calling us liars. I have been threatened on a number of times for my stance against marijuana (as have the other members of our..group). I think that its interesting that when we present facts, the MJ side yells, threatens and does everything they can to discredit us. YET, the first place they come when they get in trouble is straight to us.. Most of the members of my group (a long standing private ED group) want to leave”.

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