Connect with us

State News

Va. House panel kills watered-down GOP bill on retail marijuana sales

Published

on

In a nod to the political reality that the Virginia General Assembly is unlikely to legalize retail sales of marijuana this session, a Republican lawmaker encouraged his colleagues to ask the state’s Cannabis Control Authority to start drawing up rules for a retail marketplace that legislators could look at next year.

Speaking before a GOP-led House of Delegates subcommittee Tuesday night, Del. Keith Hodges, R-Middlesex, said he’s never been a big fan of sanctioning recreational marijuana use. But, he added, Virginia’s refusal to allow retail marijuana sales — while making marijuana legal to grow at home and possess in small amounts — has created public safety risks from unregulated products that are more widely available than ever.

“If we do nothing, we have a problem on our hands,” Hodges said. “And we need to protect the citizens of Virginia from the illicit market.”

Greg Habeeb, a former Republican delegate turned lobbyist representing the Virginia Cannabis Association, said the watered-down bill should be entirely uncontroversial and something even Gov. Glenn Youngkin could support, despite the administration’s reluctance to get behind legal weed sales.

“All this bill does is says the [Cannabis Control Authority], that you all have propped up and funded, should do its job of advising you guys of what a market could look like next year,” Habeeb said.

The vote on the bill was far from unanimous. It failed 5-2, with Republicans opposing it and Democrats supporting it. The same subcommittee rejected a different Republican-sponsored bill that would have established a retail marijuana market rather than planning how it could be done in the future.

The Democratic-led state Senate is still working on its own marijuana sales bill, but the action in the House Tuesday evening is a strong sign the 2023 session will be another year of deadlock on the issue.

As he made a motion to block the legislation that asked the cannabis board to begin drafting rules for how a retail marketplace would function, Del. Chris Runion, R-Rockingham, said the bill didn’t do anything to address illegal or dangerous products currently being sold in Virginia.

“We do have several bills moving forward that address that,” Runion said. “So I think that needs to be our focus.”

Runion did not lay out a case for why the General Assembly can’t pass both bills, moving toward a retail marketplace while also cracking down on largely unregulated products like hemp-derived delta-8, which can still get users high even though it’s technically not marijuana.

The Youngkin administration is backing legislation to impose stricter regulations on businesses that sell those products, with a particular eye toward protecting children from THC-infused edibles that often come in colorful but confusingly labeled packaging.

Because the hemp regulation bills appear to be moving forward in the Senate, there’s still a chance advocates could try to tie the two issues together. The Youngkin administration has pushed back against that approach.

“The decision on whether to legalize retail sales and whether to clean up harmful hemp products hopefully should be considered separately,” Parker Slaybaugh, chief deputy secretary of agriculture and forestry, told lawmakers at a committee hearing.

Numerous representatives from the cannabis industry have insisted the two topics can’t be separated, arguing the state’s problem with unregulated intoxicating products is a direct result of lawmakers’ failure to set up a state-sanctioned market with safer, legal products.

A lobbyist for Jushi, a company that has one of Virginia’s few licenses to sell medical cannabis but also sells recreational products in states that allow them, emphasized that nothing in the scaled-back, one-page Hodges bill would cause any new dispensaries to open.

“We do things incrementally in Virginia,” said Jushi representative Hunter Jamerson. “I think this is that incremental approach.”

The status of two hemp regulation bills in the House was unclear as of Wednesday afternoon when both were surprisingly voted down 11-9 in the Courts of Justice Committee. The committee is not yet done with its meetings, so the legislation could still be revived for another vote.

Linking the marijuana and hemp bills together could force the two sides to negotiate a deal later in the session. However, it could also raise the possibility of failure on both fronts if Democrats refuse to support standalone hemp legislation and Republicans insist on blocking retail weed sales.

On the Senate side, the major cannabis bills are pending in the Finance and Appropriations Committee, which is set to meet Thursday. At the urging of progressive activists, the Senate marijuana bill was amended to give Virginians incarcerated for marijuana-related offenses an opportunity to have their sentences reconsidered by the courts. Some Democrats have insisted on that provision, which supporters see as a matter of fairness to Black communities disproportionately impacted by marijuana prohibition.

Tuesday is the crossover deadline for each chamber to finish work on its own bills.

 

by Graham Moomaw, Virginia Mercury


Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sarah Vogelsong for questions: info@virginiamercury.com. Follow Virginia Mercury on Facebook and Twitter.

Front Royal, VA
90°
Fair
5:47 am8:36 pm EDT
Feels like: 91°F
Wind: 9mph NW
Humidity: 36%
Pressure: 29.87"Hg
UV index: 5
MonTueWed
82°F / 59°F
84°F / 70°F
86°F / 70°F
Interesting Things to Know8 hours ago

Does Your Teen or College Student Need to File Taxes?

Real Estate9 hours ago

Building a Rental Property Can Offer Investors More Control and Long-Term Value

Home10 hours ago

Fair Estate Planning Can Help Prevent Family Disputes

Community Events1 day ago

Chelsea Academy Announces Summer Sports, Academic, and Activity Camps

Community Events1 day ago

VA250 Mobile Museum Experience Coming to Front Royal June 18-21

National News1 day ago

Trump Touts Farm Policies, Trade, and Rural Priorities During Wisconsin Visit

National News1 day ago

US Senate Blocks Trump’s SAVE America Act, Thwarting Restrictions on Voting

Interesting Things to Know1 day ago

The Ocean Is Fighting Back

Interesting Things to Know1 day ago

Simple Ways to Personalize a Father’s Day Card

Agriculture1 day ago

Careful Planning Helps Keep Livestock Safe During Transport

Historically Speaking1 day ago

The People’s Power Begins with the Ballot

Livestream - FR Cardinals2 days ago

Front Royal Cardinals Host Woodstock River Bandits, Sunday – June 7

Local Government2 days ago

New Economic Development Director Shares Modus Operandi At Joint Town Council and Board of Supervisors Work Session

Local Government2 days ago

Topography Complicates Automobile Graveyard Application at Town Planning Commission Work Session

Local News2 days ago

VDOT: Warren County Traffic Alert for June 8 – 12, 2026

Local News2 days ago

Virginia State Police Report Firearms, Narcotics Seizures in Weekly Crime Suppression Operations

Local News2 days ago

Warren County APS Urges Residents to Watch for Elder Abuse, Financial Scams

Business Growth Series2 days ago

Business Growth Series: No Clear Goal? No Growth.

State News2 days ago

After Ashland Dam Removal, Freshwater Mussel Species Reintroduced to South Anna River

Opinion2 days ago

Commentary: What Virginians’ and Americans’ D-Day Sacrifices Teach Us About Our Country Now

State News2 days ago

FOIA Friday: Richmond City and Schools Face Scrutiny

Obituaries2 days ago

Johnnie Otis Kaufman Jr. (1946 – 2026)

Food2 days ago

Patio Season Brings an Easygoing Taste of Summer

Home2 days ago

Humane Steps Can Help Protect Gardens from Local Wildlife

Livestream - FR Cardinals3 days ago

Front Royal Cardinals Host Winchester Royals Saturday – June 6