2019 -- H 5795 | |
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LC002014 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2019 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS-THE RHODE ISLAND CANNABIS EQUITY ACT OF | |
2019 | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Ranglin-Vassell, Walsh, Almeida, Lombardi, and Slater | |
Date Introduced: March 01, 2019 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 21 of the General Laws entitled "FOOD AND DRUGS" is hereby |
2 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 28.10 |
4 | THE RHODE ISLAND CANNABIS EQUITY ACT OF 2019 |
5 | 21-28.10-1. Short title. |
6 | This act shall be known and may be cited as the Rhode Island Cannabis Equity Act of |
7 | 2019. |
8 | 21-28.10-2. Legislative findings. |
9 | The general assembly finds and declares the following: |
10 | (1) In 2005, Rhode Island passed the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical |
11 | Marijuana Act. Rhode Island has also decriminalized possession of one ounce or less of cannabis |
12 | for personal use. With the advent of different states throughout the country legalizing cannabis, |
13 | the general assembly finds that regulating it in a way that reduces barriers to entry into the legal, |
14 | regulated market would benefit the state and those individuals who are inequitably being denied |
15 | the opportunity to enter into the business of selling and cultivating cannabis due to financial, |
16 | educational and other barriers. |
17 | (2) Cannabis prohibition had a devastating impact on communities in Rhode Island and |
18 | across the United States. Persons convicted of a cannabis offense and their families suffer the |
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1 | long-term consequences of prohibition. These individuals have a more difficult time entering the |
2 | newly created adult-use cannabis industry due, in part, to a lack of access to capital, business |
3 | space, technical support, and regulatory compliance assistance. |
4 | (3) During the era of cannabis prohibition in Rhode Island, the burdens of arrests, |
5 | convictions, and long-term collateral consequences arising from a conviction affected people of |
6 | all races at nearly identical rates. The collateral consequences associated with cannabis law |
7 | violations, coupled with generational poverty and a lack of access to resources, make it |
8 | extraordinarily difficult for persons with convictions to enter the newly regulated industry. |
9 | (4) Offering technical support, regulatory compliance assistance, and assistance with |
10 | securing the capital necessary to begin a business will further the stated intent of this act by |
11 | reducing barriers to licensure and employment in the regulated industry. |
12 | (5) Offering these supports will also aid the state in its goal of eliminating or reducing the |
13 | illicit cannabis market by bringing more people into the legal marketplace. |
14 | (6) It is the intent of the general assembly in enacting this act to ensure that persons most |
15 | harmed by cannabis criminalization and poverty be offered assistance to enter the multibillion |
16 | dollar cannabis industry as entrepreneurs or as employees with high quality, well-paying jobs. |
17 | (7) It is the intent of the general assembly in enacting this act that the cannabis industry |
18 | be representative of the state’s population, and that barriers to entering the industry are reduced |
19 | through support to those most in need. |
20 | (h) The general assembly finds and declares that this act furthers the purposes and intent |
21 | of the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act and prospectively will |
22 | reduce barriers in the future as Rhode Island contemplates legalization of cannabis. |
23 | 21-28.10-3. Definitions. |
24 | For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply: |
25 | (1) "Areas of disproportionate impact" means geographical areas that, due to statute, |
26 | policy or other law, have been adversely affected more than other areas within the same |
27 | municipality or state. |
28 | (2) "Eligible local jurisdiction" means a city or town in Rhode Island that has adopted or |
29 | operates a local equity program. |
30 | (3) "Local equity applicant" means an applicant who has submitted, or will submit, an |
31 | application to a local jurisdiction to engage in commercial cannabis activity within the municipal |
32 | boundaries of that jurisdiction and who meets the requirements of that jurisdiction's local equity |
33 | program. |
34 | (4) "Local equity licensee" means a person who has obtained a license from a local |
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1 | jurisdiction to engage in commercial cannabis activity within the municipal boundaries of that |
2 | jurisdiction and who meets the requirements of that jurisdiction's local equity program. |
3 | (5) "Local equity program" means a program adopted or operated by a local jurisdiction |
4 | that focuses on inclusion and support of individuals and communities in Rhode Island's cannabis |
5 | industry who are linked to populations or neighborhoods that were negatively or |
6 | disproportionately impacted by cannabis criminalization. Local equity programs may include, but |
7 | are not limited to, the following types of services: |
8 | (i) Small business support services offering technical assistance to those persons from |
9 | economically disadvantaged communities that experience high rates of poverty or communities |
10 | most harmed by cannabis prohibition, determined by historically high rates of arrests or |
11 | convictions for cannabis law violations; |
12 | (ii) Tiered fees or fee waivers for cannabis-related permits and licenses; |
13 | (iii) Assistance in paying state regulatory and licensing fees; |
14 | (iv) Assistance securing business locations prior to or during the application process; |
15 | (v) Assistance securing capital investments; |
16 | (vi) Assistance with regulatory compliance; |
17 | (vii) Assistance in recruitment, training, and retention of a qualified and diverse |
18 | workforce, including transitional workers. |
19 | (6) "Transitional worker" means a person who, at the time of starting employment at the |
20 | business premises, resides in a zip code or census track area with higher than average |
21 | unemployment, crime, or child death rates, and faces at least one of the following barriers to |
22 | employment: |
23 | (i) Is homeless; |
24 | (ii) Is a custodial single parent; |
25 | (iii) Is receiving public assistance; |
26 | (iv) Lacks a GED or high school diploma; |
27 | (v) Has a criminal record or other involvement with the criminal justice system; |
28 | (vi) Suffers from chronic unemployment; |
29 | (vii) Is emancipated from the foster care system; |
30 | (viii) Is a veteran; or |
31 | (ix) Is over sixty-five (65) years of age and is financially compromised. |
32 | 21-28.10-4. Establishment of board. |
33 | (a) The general assembly shall establish a board for the purpose of overseeing local |
34 | equity programs. The board shall have five (5) members, three (3) of whom shall be appointed by |
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1 | the speaker of the house of representatives and two (2) of whom shall be appointed by the senate |
2 | president. Two (2) members of the board shall have experience in cultivating cannabis; one shall |
3 | have experience in operating or managing a retail or wholesale business; one shall have |
4 | experience in banking and financing; and, one shall have experience in law enforcement and shall |
5 | be designated as the compliance agent of the board. |
6 | (b) The board shall oversee the distribution of all grants, loans and monies appropriated |
7 | by the general assembly for use in establishing and supporting applicants to local equity |
8 | programs. |
9 | (c) The board may, upon request by a local jurisdiction, provide technical assistance to a |
10 | local equity program that helps local equity applicants or local equity licensees. When |
11 | determining whether to provide technical assistance, the board shall make individual |
12 | determinations based on the reasonableness of the request and available resources. |
13 | (d) "Technical assistance" includes providing training and educational sessions regarding |
14 | state cannabis licensing processes and requirements to equity applicants or equity licensees that |
15 | are coordinated with the local equity program. |
16 | 21-28.10-5. Board review of applications. |
17 | (a)(1) Upon appropriation of funds by the general assembly, an eligible local jurisdiction |
18 | may, in the form and manner prescribed by the board, submit an application to the board for a |
19 | grant to assist local equity applicants and local equity licensees through that local jurisdiction's |
20 | equity program. |
21 | (2) The board shall review an application based on the following factors: |
22 | (i) Whether the local jurisdiction is an eligible local jurisdiction; |
23 | (ii) Whether the local jurisdiction has adopted or operates a local equity program; |
24 | (iii) Whether the local jurisdiction has identified a local equity applicant or a local equity |
25 | licensee that the local jurisdiction could assist, as defined in subsection (b) of this section, |
26 | through use of the grant funding; |
27 | (iv) Whether the local jurisdiction has demonstrated the ability to provide, or created a |
28 | plan to provide, the services identified in subsection (b) of this section; |
29 | (v) The number of existing and potential local equity applicants and local equity licensees |
30 | in the local jurisdiction; |
31 | (vi) Priority shall be given to those applicants that: |
32 | (A) Have resided in areas of disproportionate impact for five (5) of the last ten (10) years, |
33 | or |
34 | (B) Have resided in Rhode Island for twenty-four (24) months, and have a prior |
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1 | conviction under chapter 28 of title 21, or |
2 | (C) Have resided in Rhode Island for twenty-four (24) months, and have a parent or |
3 | spouse with a prior drug-related conviction. |
4 | (vi) Any additional relevant and reasonable criteria the board deems necessary. |
5 | (3) The board shall grant funding to an eligible local jurisdiction based on its review of |
6 | the factors in subsection (a)(2) of this section. If applications for funding are greater than the |
7 | amount appropriated for this grant program, the board shall prorate the funding among the |
8 | qualified applicants. |
9 | (b) An eligible local jurisdiction that receives a grant pursuant to subsection (a) of this |
10 | section shall use grant funds to assist local equity applicants and local equity licensees in that |
11 | local jurisdiction to gain entry to, and to successfully operate in, the state's regulated cannabis |
12 | marketplace. For purposes of this section, "assist" includes, but is not limited to, any of the |
13 | following methods: |
14 | (1) To provide a loan or a grant to a local equity applicant or local equity licensee to |
15 | assist the applicant or licensee with startup costs. For purposes of this section, "startup costs" |
16 | include, but are not limited to, rent, leases, local and state application and licensing fees, |
17 | regulatory adherence, testing of cannabis, equipment, capital improvements, and training and |
18 | retention of a qualified and diverse workforce, provided that no one applicant shall receive more |
19 | than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in financial assistance. |
20 | (2) To support local equity program efforts to provide sources of capital to local equity |
21 | applicants and local equity licensees. |
22 | (3) To provide direct technical assistance to local equity applicants and local equity |
23 | licensees. |
24 | (4) To assist in the administration of local equity programs. |
25 | (c) An eligible local jurisdiction that receives a grant pursuant to subsection (a) of this |
26 | section shall, on or before January 1 of the year following receipt of the grant and annually |
27 | thereafter for each year that grant funds are expended, submit an annual report to the board that |
28 | includes all of the following information: |
29 | (1) How the local jurisdiction disbursed grant funds; |
30 | (2) How the local jurisdiction identified local equity applicants or local equity licensees, |
31 | including how the local jurisdiction determines who qualifies as a local equity applicant or local |
32 | equity licensee; |
33 | (3) The number of local equity applicants and local equity licensees that were served by |
34 | the grant funds; and |
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1 | (4) Demographic data on equity applicants, equity licensees, and other applicants and |
2 | licensees in the jurisdiction, including, but not limited to, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual |
3 | orientation, income level, prior convictions, and veteran status. This information will be |
4 | consolidated and reported without the individual's identifying information. |
5 | (d) An eligible local jurisdiction that receives a grant pursuant to this section shall use no |
6 | more than ten percent (10%) of the state grant for administration, including employing staff or |
7 | hiring consultants to administer grants and the program. |
8 | 21-28.10-6. Duties of board. |
9 | To facilitate greater equity in business ownership and employment in the cannabis |
10 | market, the board shall: |
11 | (1) Serve as a point of contact for local equity programs; |
12 | (2) On or before July 1, 2020, publish approved local equity ordinances and model local |
13 | equity ordinances created by the board with input from cannabis advocacy groups and zoning |
14 | officials from participating municipalities. Advocacy groups may also include, but are not limited |
15 | to, minority business owners and entrepreneurs, organizations with expertise in addressing |
16 | barriers to employment and licensure for low-income communities or persons with prior arrests |
17 | or convictions, and unions representing cannabis workers; and |
18 | (3) To the extent feasible, coordinate with the relevant local jurisdictions to carry out the |
19 | responsibilities described in this section. |
20 | 21-28.10-7. Reporting requirements. |
21 | (a) On or before July 1, 2021, the board shall submit a report to the general assembly |
22 | regarding the progress of local equity programs that have received funding. |
23 | (b) The report shall include, but is not limited to, the following information: |
24 | (1) The cities and towns that have enacted local equity programs; |
25 | (2) The number of local equity applicants and general applicants applying for and |
26 | receiving licenses in the jurisdictions that received grants; and |
27 | (3) Information collected from all jurisdictions and applicants including profit and loss |
28 | statements, the number of employees of each applicant, the average weekly wage and benefits |
29 | provided to each employee and an accounting of any funds reimbursed to the local equity |
30 | program by the applicants. |
31 | (c) The board shall post the report required by this section and it shall be available upon |
32 | request under § 38-2-1 et. seq. |
33 | 21-28.10-8. Use of funds. |
34 | Funds realized from the imposition of fees and taxes in accordance with this chapter shall |
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1 | be directed back into the areas of disproportionate impact to fund the communities’ schools, after |
2 | school programs, community centers, or programs offering diversion for children, training and |
3 | support for successful re-entry of convicted felons to their community. |
4 | 21-28.10-9. Expungement. |
5 | (a) Any individual who is an applicant for a loan or grant under this chapter who has a |
6 | prior conviction for a cannabis offense, which is no longer a criminal offense, shall be entitled to |
7 | have such criminal conviction expunged pursuant to § 12-1.3-1, et seq. |
8 | (b) Any prior convictions for misdemeanor or felony possession of marijuana shall be |
9 | included as eligible for expungement under subsection (a) of this section. |
10 | (c) Any individual who has been incarcerated as a result of a cannabis offense shall have |
11 | all fees waived with respect to this section. |
12 | 21-28.10-10. Severability. |
13 | The provisions of this chapter are severable. If any provision of this chapter or its |
14 | application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can |
15 | be given effect without the invalid provision or application. |
16 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC002014 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS-THE RHODE ISLAND CANNABIS EQUITY ACT OF | |
2019 | |
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1 | This act would establish a board and appropriates funds from the legislature to create a |
2 | local cannabis equity program to allow those people who want to enter the business of selling |
3 | marijuana with state funding and technical assistance to do so. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC002014 | |
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