New Jersey becomes 13th state to legalize adult-use of marijuana, decriminalize cannabis possession in 'small amounts,' and create regulated cannabis marketplace

 Governor Phil Murphy signed legislation on Monday making New Jersey the latest U.S. state to legalize marijuana for recreational use, but it is expected to take up to a year before dispensaries will begin selling cannabis to the public.

The Democratic governor signed a package of three bills after voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot question in November to legalize adult use of the drug.

The enactment came more than three years after Murphy campaigned for governor on the promise to make recreational use legal in the state. 

It is more than three months after voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot question to legalize adult use of the drug. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed the bill into law on Monday

It is more than three months after voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot question to legalize adult use of the drug. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed the bill into law on Monday 

It could be about six months before the legalized marketplace is up and running. Pictured, a vendor makes change for a marijuana customer at a cannabis marketplace in Los Angeles

It could be about six months before the legalized marketplace is up and running. Pictured, a vendor makes change for a marijuana customer at a cannabis marketplace in Los Angeles

New Jersey Governor Murphy signs bills to legalize marijuana use
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Legalization was delayed by political opposition within the state legislature, even though both houses are controlled by members of Murphy's own party.

'New Jersey's broken & indefensible marijuana laws are no more,' Murphy said on Twitter.

Murphy signed into law bills that allow possession of up to six ounces of marijuana by people age 21 or older. 

Distribution and growing cannabis without a license remain illegal. The legislation, passed earlier on Monday by the Assembly and Senate, also eased penalties for minors for possession of marijuana.

New Jersey joins more than a dozen other U.S. states, including other East Coast states of Maine, Vermont and Massachusetts, in legalizing cannabis for recreational use. Dozens of states permit marijuana to be used by patients suffering a variety of medical conditions.

The move is expected to boost New Jersey's pandemic-stricken economy by launching a for-profit cannabis industry that should generate millions of tax dollars for the state. Recreational sales at state-licensed dispensaries, however, may be as much as a year away.


In a series of tweets, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced the new law and revealed its implications

In a series of tweets, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced the new law and revealed its implications

'We can get down to the business of establishing a responsible, sustainable, profitable and diverse adult-use and expanded medical cannabis market in New Jersey,' Edmund DeVeaux, head of the New Jersey CannaBusiness Association, said in a statement.

'We can stop the senseless arrests for possession and use of a product that should have never been criminalized in the first place, and the voters approved over three months ago,' he said. 

'The reason I signed these bills, the reason why we´ve been in this fight is for social justice,' he said Monday during a news conference.

He alluded to decades-old stringent policing of marijuana laws frequently called the War on Drugs that resulted in Black residents facing disproportionate consequences.

'At long last, we've broken through and as of today, better days are here, and lives that have been nicked or in some cases ruined we'll be able to correct. At long last and from this moment going forward, we won't have to see that same chapter written again in our state's history.'

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signs into law legislation to set up a recreational marijuana marketplace, in Trenton, New Jersey

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signs into law legislation to set up a recreational marijuana marketplace, in Trenton, New Jersey

 Still, it could be about six months before the legalized marketplace is up and running, Murphy and industry analysts estimated. That's because the state's new Cannabis Regulatory Commission has to get up and running, and put in place regulations and licenses.

Legislation that passed only on Monday after weeks of negotiation makes underage possession of alcohol and marijuana subject to a written warnings that escalate to include parental notification and a referral to community services upon subsequent violations.

Underage drinking had been punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and up to six months in jail.

Part of the legislation makes it so towns will no longer have the authority to enact ordinances with civil penalties or fines concerning underage possession or consumption violations on private property, among other measures.

It also increases the liability for suppliers of cannabis items to underage people by making a third or subsequent violation a petty disorderly persons offense.

Some Republicans seemed aghast at reducing penalties.

'There's no consequence,' GOP Sen. Bob Singer said. 'We're now saying if you´re caught with it underage it´s a free pass.'

Murphy responded Monday saying that marijuana should be treated with 'responsibility.'

Paige Dellafave-DeRosa, a processing supervisor at Compassionate Care Foundation's medical marijuana dispensary in Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey clips leaves off marijuana buds

Paige Dellafave-DeRosa, a processing supervisor at Compassionate Care Foundation's medical marijuana dispensary in Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey clips leaves off marijuana buds

'The words adult-use have been associated with this from Day One,' he said.

State Police Superintendent Col. Pat Callahan said in a brief interview that the attorney general and his office were coming with guidelines for all law enforcement officials across the state about how to enforce the new laws.

For consumers, the marketplace legalization means the state's 6.625% sales tax applies. Seventy percent of the proceeds will go to areas disproportionately affected by marijuana-related arrests. 

Black residents were likelier - up to three times as much - to face marijuana charges than white residents.

Towns can levy a tax of up to 2% under the measure.

Also under the bill, the Cannabis Regulatory Commission will be able to levy an excise tax, the amount of which will depend on the cost per ounce of cannabis. 

There will be four levels of tax under the bill, so if cannabis is $350 or more, the tax per ounce will be $10. That rises to $60 per ounce if the retail price of the product is less than $250.

Cultivation manager Nick D'Amelio works on young marijuana plants at the TerrAscend New Jersey farm in Boonton Township at Boonton Marijuana Farm, pictured in November 2020

Cultivation manager Nick D'Amelio works on young marijuana plants at the TerrAscend New Jersey farm in Boonton Township at Boonton Marijuana Farm, pictured in November 2020

The number of licenses for cultivators will be set at 37 for two years. The state Senate was pushing for no limits, but the Assembly wanted the caps.

The decriminalization measure is necessary because the state's laws make possession a crime, despite the voter-approved amendment, according to lawmakers. The measure passed with with broad bipartisan support.

The months-long delay in enacting the legislation stemmed from Murphy's concerns that young people, particularly those in Black and Latino communities, would continue to bear the brunt of arrests and citations. That led to the bill aimed at loosening underage penalties.

Assembly Member Shavonda Sumter, a member of the Legislative Black Caucus, called the inclusion of the bill that loosened penalties a victory for the group.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy's bill sees the setting up of a recreational marijuana marketplace, cannabis decriminalization and looser penalties for underage possession of the drug and alcohol

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy's bill sees the setting up of a recreational marijuana marketplace, cannabis decriminalization and looser penalties for underage possession of the drug and alcohol

'We put a progressive warning system in place that does not allow for an infraction of possibly sampling a cannabis product to become a lifelong sentence,' she said in an interview.

The delay sparked widespread frustration.

'This process has been a debacle from the beginning. The voters did their job,' Democratic Sen. Paul Sarlo said. He had opposed marijuana legalization, though was supportive of decriminalization. He voted to pass the bill Monday because he said voters want lawmakers to move on and focus on COVID-19 relief.

Edmund DeVeaux, the head of the New Jersey CannaBusiness Association, called on lawmakers and the governor to get the legislation enacted.

'Enough already. Only in New Jersey could the will of the voters be so callously ignored,' he said in a statement recently.

After Murphy signed the bills, he said it was time to 'get down to business.'

'It took us a long time to get here, but thankfully, finally, we can move forward,' he said.

New Jersey becomes 13th state to legalize adult-use of marijuana, decriminalize cannabis possession in 'small amounts,' and create regulated cannabis marketplace New Jersey becomes 13th state to legalize adult-use of marijuana, decriminalize cannabis possession in 'small amounts,' and create regulated cannabis marketplace Reviewed by Your Destination on February 23, 2021 Rating: 5

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