A bill to grant all medical cannabis patients protection from arrest received almost entirely positive testimony, along with complaints about homegrowing and cannabis scheduling policy.
Here are some observations from the Tuesday February 8th Washington State Senate Law and Justice Committee (WA Senate LAW) Committee Meeting.
My top 3 takeaways:
- WA Senate LAW Counsel Joe McKittrick provided a briefing on HB 1105, “Concerning arrest protections for the medical use of cannabis” (audio - 3m, video).
- The legislation was introduced in 2021 and first heard in February before passage by the Washington State House of Representatives (WA House) in early March. WA Senate LAW initially heard and recommended the bill for passage at meetings just over two weeks later, sending the bill on to the Washington State Senate Rules Committee (WA Senate RULE). However, no further action was taken before the conclusion of the 2021 legislative session, and the bill was, “by resolution, returned to House Rules Committee for third reading” at the beginning of the 2022 session.
- On January 26th, the House again approved HB 1105 with 73 yeas, 24 nays, and one excused, making it the first cannabis-focused bill to pass its house of origin in 2022 and be sent to the other chamber.
- McKittrick went over the effects outlined in the bill analysis.
- “Provides criminal and civil protections, rather than an affirmative defense, to qualifying patients and designated providers who have a valid authorization for the medical use of marijuana.
- Patients already exercised “certain legal protections not afforded to recreational users,” including the opportunity to “cultivate cannabis at home” and “possess a larger quantity of cannabis than” adult consumers were permitted.
- Removes the affirmative defense for qualifying patients and designated providers who are not entered into the medical marijuana database.
- “In 2015, the [Washington State] Department of Health developed and implemented the medical marijuana authorization database,” and those choosing to register their authorization were issued a recognition card. Possession of the card barred them from being “arrested, prosecuted, or subject to other criminal sanctions or civil consequences” related to cannabis use in compliance with RCW 69.51A. Patients not registering with the database are “not provided these protections against criminal sanctions or civil consequences” but can exercise “an affirmative defense at trial.”
- Specifies the marijuana possession limit for a person who is both a qualifying patient and a designated provider for another qualifying patient.”
- “Provides criminal and civil protections, rather than an affirmative defense, to qualifying patients and designated providers who have a valid authorization for the medical use of marijuana.
- Four people discussed the benefits the bill provided to medical patients and designated providers, and another four dozen signed in ‘pro’ on the measure.
- Steven Field, Medical cannabis patient and the Cannabis Alliance member (audio - 2m, video)
- Field said he’d been living with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis for “almost 30 years,” suffering “a major setback and ha[ving] a stroke” in 2019, recovery from which kept him from completing “the simplest of tasks.” Having exhausted other treatment options, he’d found that cannabis “helped me the most,” and believed patients had enough difficulty in their lives without “the worried fear of intrusive regulatory or criminal law encounters which can affect our health.” Field was not comfortable “releasing information into the state registry” nor being criminalized for “the simple act of growing and using a plant.” He encouraged committee members to demonstrate compassion and support “in the form of common sense legislation” that would help medical patients “throughout the state.”
- Lisa Buchanan, Registered Nurse and Dockside Cannabis Medical Consultant (audio - 2m, video)
- Mary Brown, Founder of SMJ Consulting at Advanced Integrative Medical Science (AIMS) Institute (audio - 2m, video)
- Brown testified that the patients at the institute used medical cannabis “both in conjunction with allopathic treatments as well as with naturopathic treatments,” rather than “simply to get high.” She said her organization was supporting the bill on “behalf of patients who often are really at the end of their options” in addition to being “inundated with the day-to-day issues of living with a terminal illness, and often, reauthorizing their medical authorization is very difficult for them.”
- John Kingsbury, Cannabis Alliance Patient Committee Chair (audio - 1m, video, written comments)
- Kingsbury began his remarks noting “the medical struggles I’ve gone through during the past 20 years” encouraged him to explore the medical dimensions of cannabis following the “toll that pharmaceuticals were taking on my health and quality of life.” He commented that the bill had “progressed quickly with strong support,” which he attributed to its language speaking to “common sense and basic human decency.” Kingsbury added that the legislation offered no reprieve from legal sanctions for “those who are not following the law” and the justification for keeping some patient activity illegal wasn’t tenable, “especially for well-vetted patients who already have challenging lives.”
- Field, Buchanan, and Kingsbury were among those who testified in favor of HB 1105 at its first hearing in February 2021.
- Signed in but not testifying (48)
- Siabhon Ayuso
- Lukas Barfield, WSLCB Cannabis Advisory Council (CAC) Patient Representative
- Joy Beckerman, Hemp Ace International Founder, U.S. Hemp Roundtable Director, U.S. Hemp Authority Technical Committee Member
- Scott Berka, Full Throttle Farms, BroCo LLC, and Aloha Botanics Owner; Washington Sun and Craft Growers Association (WSCA) Member
- Meredith Benesh
- Daniela Bernhard, Uncle Ike’s Co-Owner
- Keith Boyce, New Day Cannabis
- Jeanette Carroll
- Alex Cooley
- Cindy Cooper
- John Davis, Diego Pellicer President and Cannabis Alliance Board Member
- Kim Ducote, The Cannabis Alliance Membership Director
- Courtney Duhaime, Leafly Sales Executive
- Jeffrey Eichen, RawmasteTM Productions & Goods
- Wanda Ellis-Fant
- Francis “Frank” Fauls, Evergreen GroPro LLC
- John Gereighty, 420Farms
- Steven P. Hadley, Seattle Hempfest
- Chuck Ijadi
- Michael Jeffery
- Erik Johansen
- Lara Kaminsky, The Cannabis Alliance Government Affairs Liaison
- Jason Lammers, 420WholesalePack General Manager and Cannabis Alliance Member
- Elizabeth LeBarron
- Neil Lequia, The Full Spectrum Founder
- Amanda McCullough
- Jillian McCone, Cannabis Alliance Member
- William McPeak, Seattle Hempfest
- Jeff Merryman, I Grow Owner
- Alan Mulkey
- Yoko Miyashita, Leafly CEO
- Michael J. Nannie
- Maurice “Chuck” Olivier
- Susan Peters, Leafly
- Paul Roby
- Caitlein Ryan, Cannabis Alliance Interim Executive Director and Board President
- Pat Reynolds, Confidence Analytics Operations Director
- Albert Sardinas, Washington Build Back Black Alliance (WBBBA)
- Ryan Sevigny. Landrace Brands President, board member for the Cannabis Alliance and WSCA
- Micah Sherman, Raven Co-Owner and WSCA Board Member
- Brian Stone
- Chris Thompson, WSLCB Director of Legislative Relations
- Jennifer Thorp, Cannabis Alliance Member
- John Tocher
- Mitzi Vaughn, Cannabis Alliance Legal Counsel
- Shawn DeNae Wagenseller, Washington Bud Company Co-Owner and WSCA Board Member
- Aaron Watson
- Tamara Weinmann, Bellevue Cannabis Company Owner
- Steven Field, Medical cannabis patient and the Cannabis Alliance member (audio - 2m, video)
- One speaker stood against the bill to express law enforcement concerns around home growing, and another was ‘other’ believing the patient registry was mostly unneeded.
- Taylor Elkins-Gardner, Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs (WASPC) Deputy Policy Director and Lobbyist (audio - 2m, video)
- Gardner reported that WASPC was opposed to the legislation even as they recognized medical cannabis use was “considered lawful.” Drawing on the “strong regulatory scheme” envisioned in cannabis legalization in 2012, the organization wanted a matching regulatory scheme applied to patient home growing of cannabis.
- Feeling there was “no shortage” of legal cannabis—for which patients could pay a 37% excise tax—Gardner explained that WASPC members had “concerns over any legislation that potentially increases risks to public safety.”
- SB 5004, “Providing a tax exemption for medical marijuana patients,” was proposed and passed by the senate and a house policy committee in 2021. In 2022, the bill was again passed by the senate on January 19th and, at publication time, had been referred back to the Washington State House Finance Committee (WA House FIN).
- Should legislators move ahead with the bill, Gardner recommended “safeguards around the home grow provisions.” Her examples were “a total plant limit for home,” a “reduced plant limit per person,” barring outdoor cultivation or visibility, penalties for persons under 21 having access to a medical cannabis garden, and requiring written permission if a patient didn’t own the property where they were growing. Gardner asserted these additional requirements would protect “children in the homes, but also the home growers themselves.”
- Senator Keith Wagoner asked about outreach to the bill sponsor on changing the bill. Gardner said she hadn’t engaged with lawmakers on the topic beyond her testimony (audio - 1m, video).
- Vice Chair Yasmin Trudeau inquired whether there was an actual “issue with homegrown that you all have identified.” Gardner responded that “various officers and agencies” believed allowing the public “to find out about” cannabis cultivation at homes resulted in “opportunities for people to take advantage of that.” She noted that some adults growing cannabis for themselves had reported being “victims” of robbery after another person learned about their garden. Gardner tried to compare medical homegrows to cash-only cannabis retail operations which were “also subject to these victimizations.” Kingsbury spoke up to share his confusion about Gardner’s remarks, saying “this is not a home grow bill” and that growing rights for patients would not be altered by it (audio - 2m, video).
- HB 1019, legislation to allow anyone over 21 to grow a limited amount of cannabis in their home was introduced but was not advanced past a February 2021 hearing in the Washington State House Appropriations Committee (WA House APP). The Washington State Legislative Task Force on Social Equity in Cannabis (WA SECTF) would offer recommendations around “the social Equity Impact of Altering residential cannabis agriculture regulations” in a legislative report due December 9th, 2022.
- Learn more about the issue from Homegrow Washington.
- John Worthington, American Alliance for Medical Cannabis (AAMC, audio - 2m, video)
- Worthington’s position of ‘other’ was because he opposed the bill as written but “would support it with amendments.” He didn’t want “regular flower to be on the registry, I would only allow [patients engaged in] the derivatives process” to be registered with the state. Worthington claimed cannabis hadn’t been proven to be “as dangerous as” other Schedule I drugs and that “all these years law enforcement, and other folks, have been able to have a different rule promulgation process” that kept tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as a Schedule I substance. “I’m trying to gear the policy towards a…realistic rescheduling,” he stated, and didn’t think adults, patient or otherwise, cultivating cannabis plants needed the attention of the state, except if they engaged in producing “derivatives.”
- Senator Patty Kuderer asked for clarity around his AAMC affiliation (audio - <1m, video).
- Valerie King signed in as opposed to HB 1105, but chose not to testify.
- At publication time, HB 1105 was scheduled for an executive session in WA Senate LAW on February 17th.
- Taylor Elkins-Gardner, Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs (WASPC) Deputy Policy Director and Lobbyist (audio - 2m, video)
Information Set
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Announcement - v1 (Feb 3, 2022) [ Info ]
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Agenda - v1 (Feb 3, 2022) [ Info ]
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HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Sign In - Testifying (Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Sign In - Not Testifying (Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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WA Legislature - 2021-22 - HB 1105
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Bill Text - H-0009.2 (Jan 7, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Analysis - WSLCB Enforcement (Jan 12, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Analysis - WA House HCW (Feb 3, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Report - WA House HCW (Feb 11, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Report - WA House - v1 (Mar 1, 2021) [ Info ]
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Background Summary - WA House (Mar 5, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Analysis - WA Senate LAW - v1 (Mar 14, 2021) [ Info ]
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Amendment - S-2107.1 (Mar 17, 2021) [ Info ]
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Bill Report - WA Senate LAW - v1 (Mar 18, 2021) [ Info ]
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Announcement - Chamber Pull (Jan 25, 2022) [ Info ]
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Bill Report - WA House - v2 (Jan 26, 2022) [ Info ]
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Bill Background - WA House (Feb 7, 2022) [ Info ]
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Bill Analysis - WA Senate LAW - v2 (Feb 7, 2022) [ Info ]
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Bill Report - WA Senate LAW - v2 (Feb 17, 2022) [ Info ]
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Partial Audio - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Cannabis Observer
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 00 - Complete (20m 53s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 01 - Welcome - Manka Dhingra (14s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 02 - Guidelines - Manka Dhingra (1m 4s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 03 - Introduction - Mike Padden (40s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 04 - Introduction - Keith Wagoner (22s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 05 - Introduction - Patty Kuderer (16s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 06 - Introduction - Jim McCune (20s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 07 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Staff Report - Joe McKittrick (3m 9s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 08 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - Steven Field (2m 16s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 09 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - Lisa Buchanan (2m; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 10 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - Mary Brown (1m 43s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 11 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - John Kingsbury (1m 25s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 12 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - Taylor Gardner (2m 3s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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Audio - Cannabis Observer - 13 - HB 1105 - Public Hearing - Testimony - John Worthington (2m 5s; Feb 8, 2022) [ Info ]
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WA Senate LAW - Committee Meeting - General Information
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WA Senate - 2023 - General Information
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WA Senate - 2023 - General Information
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