Gov. Scott vetoes Vermont’s legalization bill, o
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Last update: May 24, 2017
On May 10, 2017, the Vermont House of Representatives made history when it voted to approve the Senate’s amendment to S. 22 and sent the bill to Gov. Phil Scott’s desk. Although eight other states have legalized marijuana by ballot initiative, this was the first time any state legislature had voted to pass a bill ending marijuana prohibition!
Gov. Scott vetoed the bill on May 24. On a positive note, he promised to work with the Legislature on a plan that could pass this summer during the veto session scheduled to begin on June 21.
If you live in Vermont, please contact your representatives and senators, and urge them to work with Gov. Scott to pass a compromise this summer!
We are very grateful to our allies in the Legislature for their votes in support of ending marijuana prohibition, and we’d especially like to thank Laura Subin, Matthew Tolley, and all our allies at the Vermont Coalition to Regulate Marijuana for their hard work to push this bill onto the governor’s desk.
As amended, the bill would have eliminated penalties for adults’ possession of one ounce or less of marijuana, two or fewer mature plants, and four or fewer immature plants, effective on July 1, 2018. S. 22 would have also created a study commission to craft legislation on how to best regulate and tax marijuana in Vermont.
If you live in Vermont, please click here to get involved with the Vermont Coalition to Regulate Marijuana.
Legislature passes bills to expand access for patients!
On May 10, 2017, the Vermont Senate voted to give final approval to S. 16, which would add post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Parkinson’s disease, and Crohn’s disease to the list of qualifying conditions for medical cannabis. The final bill, which reflects a compromise between the House and Senate, would also authorize one additional dispensary, and it would allowing existing dispensaries to open one additional location. Next, the bill will go to Gov. Scott’s desk.
In 2016, the Vermont Legislature and then-Gov. Peter Shumlin agreed to improve the medical marijuana law by passing S. 14, an MPP-supported bill that enables patients with glaucoma or chronic pain to qualify for the program. (Previously, the standard was “severe pain” — a much higher standard than “chronic pain.”) The new law also reduced the required minimum provider-patient relationship period from six months to three months and included other small, yet positive, changes.
In 2014, MPP worked with the legislature to expand Vermont’s law so more patients can benefit from safe, legal access. S. 247, sponsored by Sen. Jeanette White (D-Windham), passed the House and Senate and was signed by Gov. Shumlin May 27. This change in law eliminated the cap of 1,000 patients who were allowed to access dispensaries. It also allowed naturopaths to certify patients, allowed dispensaries to deliver marijuana to patients, and called for a study of the potential impacts of legalization and regulation. To view the rules for the Vermont Marijuana Program (VMP), please visit the Vermont Criminal Information Center website.
Vermont decriminalizes marijuana possession
On June 6, 2013, then-Gov. Peter Shumlin signed H. 200, which eliminated the state’s criminal penalties for possessing small amounts of marijuana and replaced them with civil fines. This was a major victory for MPP and its legislative allies in Montpelier, who worked hard to build support for this sensible reform. Leading law enforcement officials, including then-Attorney General William Sorrell and then-Public Safety Commissioner Keith Flynn, supported the bill, which went into effect July 1, 2013.
Click here for details on how H. 200 changed Vermont’s penalty structure. https://www.mpp.org/states/vermont/vermonts-d...ation-law/
As a result of this reform, Vermont police and prosecutors now waste less time and taxpayer money on enforcing laws against marijuana possession. Individuals caught possessing an ounce or less of marijuana in the Green Mountain State are now fined but do not receive a criminal conviction. Those under 21 are now generally sent to diversion.
source
https://www.mpp.org/states/vermont/