In a bipartisan vote, the US House of Representati
Post# of 4861
Now, ending a dangerous and unwieldy cash-only cannabis industry—and encouraging investment that would diversify and make more equal what’s to date been an industry dominated mostly by white men and wealthy capitalists—heads yet again to the US Senate, which is where most cannabis reform bills have gone to die.
Monday’s vote was 321 to 101, and included support from a majority of Republicans.
Though cannabis is legal at some level in 47 states—and adult-use cannabis is a booming billion-dollar industry in more than a dozen, with markets in four more states, including New York and New Jersey, soon to open—nearly every major bank and credit unions refuses to accept business from legal cannabis companies, for fear of federal prosecution or penalty.
This excuse strikes some observers as dishonest—banks for years did banner business with very illegal drug cartels, after all—and there are some banks who quietly accept cannabis customers.
However, the practical effect has been a legal industry, worth billions of dollars, forced to conduct basic transactions all in hard cash, including paying state and federal taxes, an arrangement that critics say is unfair and unsafe.
The SAFE Act clarifies that transactions involving “legitimate cannabis-related businesses” are not subject to anti-money laundering laws and that banks won’t run afoul of asset forfeiture proceedings for handling legal cannabis business’s accounts.
Sponsors say banking reform will make running marijuana businesses easier and safer. But we’ve been here before.
It seems highly likely that the Senate version of the SAFE Banking Act will at least get a hearing, which is more than the bill could expect when Sen. Mitch McConnell was Majority Leader.
The chairman of the Senate Banking Committee is Sen. Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat whose state has a medical-marijuana industry. And the ranking member, Sen. Patrick Toomey, is a Republican from Pennsylvania—which is poised to be one of the next states to legalize adult-use cannabis.
“From the lack of startup capital for the exhaustive application process to managing the extraordinary operational costs, minority business owners often face the painful decision to give up or sell their interests to predatory investors who use management agreements that deprive minority operators of meaningful rights of ownership," said Amber Littlejohn, executive director of the Minority Cannabis Business Association.
SAFE Banking could fix that—if the Senate abides.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/chrisroberts/202...y-for-now/?