WA House RSG - Committee Meeting
(February 2, 2023) - HB 1614 - Public Hearing

Supportive testimony on a bill to legalize home cultivation of cannabis highlighted the restrictions in the bill, though two speakers were opposed on safety and youth access grounds.

Here are some observations from the Thursday February 2nd Washington State House Regulated Substances and Gaming Committee (WA House RSG) Committee Meeting.

My top 3 takeaways:

  • Committee Counsel Peter Clodfelter briefed on, and answered questions about, HB 1614, “Concerning the home cultivation of cannabis."
    • When voters passed Initiative 502 in 2012, there was no provision for adults to cultivate any plants for personal consumption. That same year, Colorado Amendment 64 was passed and allowed those 21 and older to grow three plants. Since that time, allowing limited home cultivation has become the predominant policy in legal cannabis states, with only Illinois and New Jersey not allowing any recreational home grows. With legislation as far back as 2015, the last bill before HB 1614 on the topic was HB 1019, which was advanced as far as a fiscal committee hearing by the Washington State House Appropriations Committee (WA House APP).
    • Clodfelter explained the bill analysis, which listed the effects of the legislation (audio - 2m, video).
      • Authorizes adults age 21 and over to produce up to six cannabis plants on the premises of their housing unit, subject to production and possession limits and other restrictions and conditions.
      • Establishes class 3 civil infractions related to plants or cannabis being visible within the ordinary public view or readily smelled.
      • Establishes class 1 civil infractions related to the unsafe storage of home grown cannabis.
      • Prohibits home grows by family day care providers and foster family homes, retains landlords' rights to prohibit home grows, and modifies the real property forfeiture statute as it applies to cannabis.
      • Prohibits the investigation and enforcement of home grow requirements by the Liquor and Cannabis Board, except for mutual law enforcement assistance upon request in certain circumstances.
    • Representative Kristine Reeves asked Clodfelter whether the bill had any “federal preemption clauses,” or “conversations around mortgages,” insurance, banking, or “other aspects related to home ownership that we might need to be taking into consideration?” Clodfelter responded that the bill didn’t address those topics beyond “rental issues”: rights of landlords to deny home cultivation as part of a lease agreement (audio - 1m, video).
  • Representatives of substance use prevention and law enforcement organizations spoke against the bill, though one suggested possible revisions to allow home grows based on residential distance from a cannabis retailer.
    • 19 individuals registered their opposition to the bill (testifying, not testifying).
    • Taylor Gardner, Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs (WASPC) Policy Director, said her members were “generally” opposed to home growing and preferred cannabis stay in a “well regulated, commercial setting” as they didn’t believe the measure would “make Washingtonians safer.” She appreciated the limits and requirements in the bill, but suggested that prior cannabis retail robberies targeting cash and packaged products could result in “threats and crimes” that “follow people back to their homes.” Should the bill be advanced, Gardner encouraged expanded mandates for secure storage of plants and cannabis, and noted that Nevada home growing policies only allowed personal gardens in homes 25 miles or more from a retail outlet (audio - 2m, video).
    • Linda Thompson, Washington Association for Substance Misuse and Violence Prevention (WASAVP) Board Member, didn’t want to allow adult cultivation because her members were “looking at youth access" and community safety. She commented that calls for greater education from cannabis industry representatives hadn’t kept them from advocating to “expand the cannabis market, delivery regulations, even a bill to eliminate the regulation on signage and billboards.” She asked lawmakers to invest more heavily in prevention organizations and programs, saying groups like WASAVP “cannot keep up with the prevention work we need to do" (audio - 2m, video).

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