WSLCB - Board Caucus
(August 30, 2022)

Tuesday August 30, 2022 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Observed
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The three-member board of the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB) meets weekly in caucus to discuss current issues and receive invited briefings from agency staff.

Observations

Members prepared to approve the 21st tribal cannabis compact and heard the status of 2023 agency request legislation the same day WSLCB officers led raids on two cannabis markets.

Here are some observations from the Tuesday August 30th Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB) Board Caucus.

My top 3 takeaways:

  • The cannabis compact between the state and the Hoh Tribe presented to the board was similar to past compacts, though it contained some definition and process differences while incorporating a “particular” comma in state law (audio - 10m, WSLCB video, TVW video, Compact).
    • WSLCB represents Washington State when crafting agreements with sovereign tribal governments called cannabis compacts giving access to parts of the state legal cannabis market while leaving those governments in charge of aspects of licensing approval, reporting, and tax collection.
    • Establishing that the agency had finalized 20 cannabis compacts to date, Tribal Liaison and Director of Legislative Relations Chris Thompson started off his presentation by giving his view that the Hoh Tribe compact was "quite similar to” the template offered by the agency.
    • After reviewing the process and history behind cannabis compacts, he elaborated on the Hoh Tribe compact, stating it would “authorize that tribe to engage in activities including retail, production, and processing, research, and a testing lab,” though tribal officials would choose whether they wanted to pursue licensure for those activities. Thompson then identified the document’s “new language":
    • An “important and a little bit complicated” issue for Thompson was how the compact included “the comma.” He explained the 2015 law creating compacts missed “a particular comma in a particular place regarding tax exemptions.” The comma was subsequently added, “in brackets,” he noted, by staff of the Washington State Office of the Code Reviser (WA CRO) though WSLCB “has for at least several years not recognized that comma…as part of law” as it “originated with the Code Reviser.” Without the comma, he relayed a staff opinion that “the most straightforward reading of the statute…there’s two categories of sales that may be exempted” from a “tribal cannabis tax.” However, Thompson reported that including the comma would mean “there are three categories of exemption.” He revealed that in addition to HB 1210 changing terminology in state law to use “cannabis,” the legislation “also removed the brackets, and placed the comma in statute” in a way the agency now recognized.
      • There was no public mention of this comma, or the impact it would have, identified during public hearings on HB 1210 covered by Cannabis Observer. The final House Bill Report for the bill acknowledges “technical corrections” including “correcting scriveners' errors.
    • Thompson felt this change allowed for “a fuller recognition of tribal sovereignty” as the agency now interpreted the compact as enabling three areas of comparable excise and sales tax exemptions:
      • Sales to businesses or entities within the Hoh Tribe
      • Sales exempted under Washington law, for “example…medical patients” 
      • “Cannabis grown, produced, or processed within Indian Country”
    • Thompson said the addition of the comma resolved a “contentious issue” that had “bogged down” compact negotiations and stood to “help us improve, somewhat, our relations with our tribal partners.” Otherwise, the Hoh Tribe compact was similar to those which preceded it, he told board members, “and in a few important areas…takes us to the next level where we’re hoping to move” with other tribal agreements.
    • Grateful for Thompson and Roinila’s work, Postman observed that although "the comma is easy to laugh at," it was very important to resolve. He then wondered about the dispute resolution process, and what an arbitrator could decide besides a “question of law.” Thompson answered that they could rule on “anything that would be a question of fact" such as whether compact compliance was being met, or that it was “implemented or overseen” as agreed to by both parties. But determining an undefined phrase in existing law, “that could not go to an arbitrator,” he concluded (audio - 2m, WSLCB video, TVW video). 
    • Postman asked if the resolution around the comma would be expanded to other tribal compacts. Thompson stated there was already another compact that recognized the comma’s impact on tax exemptions and would be presented to board members once it was signed by the tribe’s leaders (audio - 1m, WSLCB video, TVW video). He also confirmed that Governor Jay Inslee would subsequently sign the compact at which point it would take effect (audio - 1m, WSLCB video, TVW video). 
    • Board members approved and signed the compact the following day at the August 31st board meeting.
  • Agency leaders acknowledged progress on request legislation for 2023 as well as the retirement of Director of Legislative Relations Chris Thompson (audio - 3m, WSLCB video, TVW video).
    • Director Rick Garza brought up the draft request bills—last talked about on August 10th—and how staff were concluding a review of all the feedback they’d received. He continued, stating that Thompson aimed to meet with board members individually about any changes and then have “a final package ready by September 12th” for submission to the governor’s office.
    • Garza next announced the departure of Thompson from the agency “in the fall” and how the search for his replacement was underway. Though Thompson had also held the position of Tribal Liaison at WSLCB after the departure of Brett Cain in August 2020, Garza remarked that the post would “sit by itself” as they’d mainly focused on cannabis compacts. He speculated that now that 21 of 29 tribes had compacts, besides revising or updating them “there’s probably only two more left.” The once “limited” Tribal Liaison position would be “a lot more broad” in the future (audio - 2m, WSLCB video, TVW video).
      • Postman promised to thank Thompson “more formally” at a later date, but felt he’d done “really, really good work for us” on legislative and tribal endeavors (audio - <1m, WSLCB video, TVW video).

Engagement Options

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1025 Union Ave SE, Olympia, WA 98501, USA

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Number: 1.564.999.2000
Conference ID: 630 432 404#

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