2019 -- H 5828 | |
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LC000710 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2019 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- ADULT USE OF CANNABIS PILOT PROGRAM | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Slater, O'Brien, Blazejewski, Williams, and Solomon | |
Date Introduced: March 08, 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 chapters: |
3 | CHAPTER 28.10 |
4 | ADULT USE OF CANNABIS PILOT PROGRAM |
5 | 21-28.10-1. Short title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Adult Use of Cannabis Pilot |
7 | Program." |
8 | 21-28.10-2. Legislative findings. |
9 | The general assembly hereby finds and declares that: |
10 | (1) An adult use of cannabis pilot program shall be implemented, recognizing there are |
11 | legitimate concerns on implementing a widespread cannabis industry in the state, necessitating an |
12 | incremental rollout of newly licensed entities to best ensure public health and safety; |
13 | (2) The pilot program will utilize the existing expertise and infrastructure of approved |
14 | entities in the medical cannabis program for cultivation, processing, and retail operations, while |
15 | allowing for a thoughtful and deliberate expansion of access to cannabis for those over the age of |
16 | twenty-one (21), and |
17 | (3) On January 2, 2021, a special legislative commission shall be created to review the |
18 | pilot program and make recommendations to the general assembly on or before March 1, 2021, |
19 | and said commission shall expire on July 1, 2021. |
| |
1 | 21-28.10-3. Definitions. |
2 | For the purposes of this chapter: |
3 | (1) "Cannabis" means marijuana and all parts of the plant of the genus cannabis, whether |
4 | growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every |
5 | compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, or resin. It |
6 | does not include hemp, the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake |
7 | made from the seeds of the plant, or any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, |
8 | or preparation of the mature stalks (except the resin extracted from it), fiber, oil, or cake, or the |
9 | sterilized seed of the plant that is incapable of germination. |
10 | (2) "Cannabis cultivation facility" means an entity that is registered pursuant to chapter |
11 | 28.11 of title 21, to be exempt from state penalties for manufacturing cannabis or cannabis |
12 | products, cultivating, preparing, packaging, and selling cannabis to a retailer, processor, or |
13 | another cannabis cultivation facility, but not for selling cannabis products or selling cannabis to |
14 | the general public. |
15 | (3) "Cannabis establishment" means a cannabis cultivation facility, processor, retailer, or |
16 | cannabis testing facility. |
17 | (4) "Cannabis paraphernalia" means equipment, products, and materials which are used |
18 | or intended for use in planting, propagating, cultivating, growing, harvesting, manufacturing, |
19 | compounding, converting, producing, processing, preparing, testing, analyzing, packaging, |
20 | repackaging, storing, containing, concealing, ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing |
21 | cannabis into the human body. |
22 | (5) "Cannabis processor" means an entity registered pursuant to chapter 28.11 of title 21 |
23 | to be exempt from state penalties for purchasing cannabis from cannabis cultivation facilities, |
24 | manufacturing cannabis products, and selling, giving, or transferring cannabis products to a |
25 | cannabis retailer or a cannabis testing facility. |
26 | (6) "Cannabis products" means concentrated cannabis and products that are comprised of |
27 | cannabis and other ingredients that are intended for use or consumption, including, but not limited |
28 | to, edible products, ointments, and tinctures. |
29 | (7) "Cannabis testing facility" means an entity that is registered pursuant to chapter 28.11 |
30 | of title 21 to be exempt from state penalties for testing cannabis and cannabis products for |
31 | potency and contaminants. |
32 | (8) "Dwelling unit" means a room or group of rooms within a dwelling used or intended |
33 | for use by one family or household, or by no more than three (3) unrelated individuals, for living, |
34 | sleeping, cooking and eating. |
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1 | (9) "Manufacture" and/or "manufacturing" the production, preparation, propagation, |
2 | compounding, conversion or processing of cannabis, either directly or indirectly, by means of |
3 | chemical synthesis, including any packaging or repackaging of the cannabis or cannabis products |
4 | or labelling or re-labeling its containers. |
5 | (10) "Public place" means any street, alley, park, sidewalk, public building other than |
6 | individual dwellings, or any place of business or assembly open to or frequented by the public, |
7 | and any other place to which the public has access. |
8 | (11) "Retailer" means an entity that is registered pursuant to chapter 28.11 of title 21 to |
9 | be exempt from state penalties for purchasing cannabis from cannabis cultivation facilities, and |
10 | selling cannabis, cannabis products, and cannabis paraphernalia to customers who are twenty-one |
11 | (21) years of age or older. |
12 | (12) "Smoke" means to heat to at least the point of combustion, causing plant material to |
13 | burn. It does not include vaporizing, which means heating below the point of combustion and |
14 | resulting in a vapor or mist. |
15 | (13) "State prosecution" means prosecution initiated or maintained by the state of Rhode |
16 | Island or an agency or political subdivision of the state of Rhode Island. |
17 | 21-28.10-4. Exempt activities. |
18 | Except as otherwise provided in this chapter: |
19 | (1) A person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older is exempt from arrest, civil or |
20 | criminal penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline by any state or local licensing board |
21 | and state prosecution for the following acts: |
22 | (i) Actually or constructively using, obtaining, purchasing, transporting, or possessing |
23 | one ounce (1 oz.) or less of cannabis, not including cannabis products; |
24 | (ii) Actually or constructively using, obtaining, purchasing, transporting, or possessing |
25 | cannabis products containing no more than three hundred milligrams (300mg) of delta-9- |
26 | tetrahydrocannabinol; |
27 | (iii) Possessing five ounces (5 oz.) or less of cannabis in the person’s primary residence; |
28 | (iv) Controlling any premises or vehicle where persons who are twenty-one (21) years of |
29 | age or older possess, process, or store amounts of cannabis and cannabis products that are legal |
30 | under state law under subsections (1)(i) and (1)(ii) of this section; |
31 | (v) Using, obtaining, manufacturing, producing, purchasing, transporting, or possessing, |
32 | actually or constructively, cannabis paraphernalia; |
33 | (vi) Giving away, without consideration, cannabis seeds to a cannabis establishment or to |
34 | a person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older; |
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1 | (vii) Selling, delivering, or transferring cannabis paraphernalia to cannabis establishments |
2 | or persons who are twenty-one (21) years of age or older; |
3 | (viii) Giving away, without consideration, the amounts of cannabis and cannabis products |
4 | that are legal under state law under subsections (1)(i) and (1)(ii) of this section if the recipient is a |
5 | person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older; |
6 | (ix) Transferring or delivering cannabis products or up to one ounce (1oz.) of cannabis to |
7 | a cannabis testing facility; |
8 | (x) Aiding and abetting another person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older in |
9 | the actions allowed under this chapter; |
10 | (xi) Cultivating, possessing, growing, processing, or transporting no more than two (2) |
11 | cannabis plants, which are accompanied by valid cannabis tags issued by the department of |
12 | business regulation, with one or fewer being a mature, flowering plant; |
13 | (xii) Controlling any premises where other persons twenty-one (21) years of age or older |
14 | cultivate cannabis plants, which are accompanied by valid cannabis tags issued by the department |
15 | of business regulation, with the total number of mature, flowering plants not exceeding three (3) |
16 | in any dwelling unit unless a greater number is allowed pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21; |
17 | (xiii) Assisting with the cultivation of cannabis plants, which are accompanied by valid |
18 | cannabis tags issued by the department of business regulation, that are cultivated at the same |
19 | location for persons twenty-one (21) years of age or older, with the total number of mature, |
20 | flowering plants not exceeding three (3) in any dwelling unit; and |
21 | (xiv) Any combination of the acts described within subsections (1)(i) through (1)(xiii) of |
22 | this section, inclusive. |
23 | (2) Except as provided in this chapter and chapter 28.11 of title 21, a retailer or any |
24 | person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older and acting in their capacity as an owner, |
25 | principal officer, partner, board member, employee, or agent of a retailer is exempt from arrest, |
26 | civil or criminal penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline by any state or local licensing |
27 | board, and state prosecution for the following acts: |
28 | (i) Actually or constructively transporting or possessing cannabis, including seedlings or |
29 | cuttings, that was purchased from a cannabis cultivation facility or a retailer; |
30 | (ii) Actually or constructively transporting or possessing cannabis products that were |
31 | purchased from a processor or a retailer; |
32 | (iii) Obtaining or purchasing cannabis from a cannabis cultivation facility or cannabis and |
33 | cannabis products from a processor or a retailer; |
34 | (iv) Selling, delivering, or transferring cannabis or cannabis products to another retailer; |
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1 | (v) Selling, transferring, or delivering cannabis, including seedlings or cuttings, cannabis |
2 | products, or cannabis paraphernalia to any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older; |
3 | (vi) Transferring or delivering cannabis or cannabis products to a cannabis testing |
4 | facility; |
5 | (vii) Controlling any premises or vehicle where cannabis, cannabis products, and |
6 | cannabis paraphernalia are possessed, sold, or deposited in a manner that is not in conflict with |
7 | this chapter or the regulations pursuant thereto; and |
8 | (viii) Any combination of the acts described within subsections (2)(i) through (2)(vii) of |
9 | this section, inclusive. |
10 | (3) Except as provided in this chapter and chapter 28.11 of title 21, a cannabis cultivation |
11 | facility or any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older and acting in their capacity as |
12 | an owner, principal officer, partner, board member, employee, or agent of a cannabis cultivation |
13 | facility is exempt from arrest, civil or criminal penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline |
14 | by any state or local licensing board, and state prosecution for the following acts: |
15 | (i) Cultivating, packing, processing, transporting, or manufacturing cannabis, but not |
16 | cannabis products; |
17 | (ii) Transporting or possessing cannabis that was produced by the cannabis cultivation |
18 | facility or another cannabis cultivation facility; |
19 | (iii) Transporting or possessing cannabis seeds; |
20 | (iv) Possessing, transporting, or producing cannabis paraphernalia; |
21 | (v) Selling, delivering, or transferring cannabis to a retailer, cannabis processor, or a |
22 | cannabis cultivation facility; |
23 | (vi) Purchasing cannabis from a cannabis cultivation facility; |
24 | (vii) Receiving cannabis seeds from a person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or |
25 | older; |
26 | (viii) Delivering or transferring cannabis to a cannabis testing facility; |
27 | (ix) Controlling any premises or vehicle where cannabis and cannabis paraphernalia are |
28 | possessed, manufactured, sold, or deposited; and |
29 | (x) Any combination of the acts described within subsections (3)(i) through (3)(ix) of this |
30 | section, inclusive. |
31 | (4) Except as provided in this chapter and chapter 28.11 of title 21, a cannabis processor |
32 | facility or any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older and acting in their capacity as |
33 | an owner, principal officer, partner, board member, employee, or agent of a cannabis processor |
34 | facility is exempt from arrest, civil or criminal penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline |
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1 | by any state or local licensing board, and state prosecution for the following acts: |
2 | (i) Producing, manufacturing, packing, processing, or transporting cannabis products; |
3 | (ii) Packing, processing, possessing, or transporting cannabis or cannabis seeds that were |
4 | produced by a cannabis cultivation center; |
5 | (iii) Possessing, transporting, or producing cannabis paraphernalia; |
6 | (iv) Manufacturing, possessing, or producing cannabis products; |
7 | (v) Selling, delivering, or transferring cannabis products to a cannabis retailer or another |
8 | cannabis processor; |
9 | (vi) Purchasing cannabis from a cannabis cultivation facility or another cannabis |
10 | processor; |
11 | (vii) Delivering or transferring cannabis or cannabis products to a cannabis testing |
12 | facility; |
13 | (viii) Controlling any premises or vehicle where cannabis products and cannabis |
14 | paraphernalia are possessed, manufactured, sold, or deposited; |
15 | (ix) Controlling any premises or vehicle where cannabis is possessed, packaged, or |
16 | deposited; and |
17 | (x) Any combination of the acts described within subsections (4)(i) through (4)(ix) of this |
18 | section, inclusive. |
19 | (5) Except as provided in this chapter and chapter 28.11 of title 21, a cannabis testing |
20 | facility or any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older and acting in their capacity as |
21 | an owner, principal officer, owner, partner, board member, employee, or agent of a cannabis |
22 | testing facility shall not be subject to state prosecution; search, except by the department of |
23 | business regulation or department of health pursuant to § 21-28.11-7; seizure; or penalty in an |
24 | manner or be denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or |
25 | disciplinary action by a court or business licensing board or entity for the following acts: |
26 | (i) Acquiring, transporting, storing, or possessing cannabis or cannabis products; |
27 | (ii) Returning cannabis and cannabis products to cannabis cultivation facilities, cannabis |
28 | processor facilities, and retailers, or, if the quantity is no more than the amounts allowed under |
29 | the provisions of this section, to individuals twenty-one (21) years of age or older; |
30 | (iii) Receiving compensation for analytical testing, including for contaminants or |
31 | potency; and |
32 | (iv) Any combination of the acts described within subsections (5)(i) through (5)(iii) of |
33 | this section, inclusive. |
34 | (6) The acts set forth in subsections (1) through (5) of this section, when undertaken in |
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1 | compliance with the provisions of this chapter, are lawful under Rhode Island law. |
2 | 21-28.10-5. Authorized activities. |
3 | (a) Any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older is authorized to manufacture, |
4 | produce, use, obtain, purchase, transport, or possess, actually or constructively, cannabis |
5 | paraphernalia. |
6 | (b) Any person who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older is authorized to distribute or |
7 | sell cannabis paraphernalia to cannabis establishments or persons who are twenty-one (21) years |
8 | of age or older. |
9 | 21-28.10-6. Public or unsecured cultivation of cannabis - Penalty. |
10 | (a) The manufacture or cultivation of two (2) or fewer cannabis plants by any person who |
11 | is twenty-one (21) years of age or older in a manner that is contrary to this subsection is a |
12 | misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000), up to ten (10) days in |
13 | jail, or both. |
14 | (b) Cultivation shall not occur in a location where the cannabis plants are subject to |
15 | public view, including from another private property, without the use of binoculars, aircraft, or |
16 | other optical aids. |
17 | (c) Cannabis must be cultivated in an enclosed, locked location. |
18 | (d) Cultivation may only occur on property lawfully in possession of the cultivator. |
19 | (e) If one or more persons under twenty-one (21) years of age live in or are guests at the |
20 | property where cannabis is cultivated, reasonable precautions must be taken to prevent their |
21 | access to cannabis plants. For purposes of illustration and not limitation, cultivating cannabis in a |
22 | locked closet, room, or fully enclosed area to which the person or persons under twenty-one (21) |
23 | years of age do not possess a key, constitutes reasonable precautions. |
24 | (f) Unless the cultivator is a cannabis cultivation facility, cannabis plants must be |
25 | accompanied by valid cannabis tags issued by the department of business regulation. |
26 | 21-28.10-7. Activities not exempt. |
27 | The provisions of this chapter do not exempt any person from arrest, civil or criminal |
28 | penalty, seizure or forfeiture of assets, discipline by any state or local licensing board, and state |
29 | prosecution for, nor may they establish an affirmative defense based on this chapter to charges |
30 | arising from, any of the following acts: |
31 | (1) Driving, operating, or being in actual physical control of a vehicle or a vessel under |
32 | power or sail while impaired by cannabis or cannabis products; |
33 | (2) Possessing cannabis or cannabis products if the person is a prisoner; |
34 | (3) Possessing cannabis or cannabis products in any local detention facility, county jail, |
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1 | state prison, reformatory, or other correctional facility, including, without limitation, any facility |
2 | for the detention of juvenile offenders; or |
3 | (4) Manufacturing of cannabis products with the use of prohibited solvents, in violation |
4 | of § 21- 28.10-12. |
5 | 21-28.10-8. Smoking cannabis shall be prohibited in all public places. |
6 | (a) A person who smokes cannabis in a public place shall be liable for a civil penalty of |
7 | one hundred fifty dollars ($150). |
8 | (b) Municipalities may impose additional fines for the public consumption of cannabis |
9 | that are equivalent to state fines for the consumption of alcohol in a public place. |
10 | 21-28.10-9. Places of employment. |
11 | The provisions of this chapter do not require employers to accommodate the use or |
12 | possession of cannabis, or being under the influence of cannabis, in a place of employment. |
13 | 21-28.10-10. Private property. |
14 | (a) Except as provided in this section, the provisions of this chapter do not require any |
15 | person, corporation, or any other entity that occupies, owns, or controls a property to allow the |
16 | consumption, cultivation, display, or transfer of cannabis on or in that property. |
17 | (b) Except as provided in this section, in the case of the rental of a residential dwelling |
18 | unit governed by chapter 18 of title 34, a landlord may not prohibit the consumption of cannabis |
19 | by non-smoked means, the display of cannabis, or the transfer without compensation of cannabis, |
20 | if it is done within a dwelling unit and is not visible from outside of the individual residential |
21 | dwelling unit. A landlord may prohibit the consumption, display, and transfer of cannabis by a |
22 | roomer as defined in § 34-18-11. |
23 | 21-28.10-11. False age representation. |
24 | (a) Any person who falsely represents themselves to be twenty-one (21) years of age or |
25 | older in order to obtain any cannabis, cannabis products, or cannabis paraphernalia pursuant to |
26 | this chapter is guilty of a violation. |
27 | (b) Any person who violates this section shall be punished for the first offense by a |
28 | mandatory fine of not less than one hundred dollars ($100) nor more than five hundred dollars |
29 | ($500) and shall be further punished by thirty (30) hours of community service and by a |
30 | suspension of their motor vehicle operator's license or driving privileges for a period of thirty (30) |
31 | days; for the second offense by a mandatory fine of not less than five hundred dollars ($500) nor |
32 | more than seven hundred fifty dollars ($750) and shall be further punished by forty (40) hours of |
33 | community service and by a suspension of their motor vehicle operator's license or driving |
34 | privileges for a period of three (3) months; and for a third and subsequent offenses by a |
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1 | mandatory fine for each offense of not less than seven hundred fifty dollars ($750) nor more than |
2 | one thousand dollars ($1,000) and shall be further punished by fifty (50) hours of community |
3 | service and by a suspension of their motor vehicle operator's license or driving privileges for a |
4 | period of one year. |
5 | 21-28.10-12. Unlawful cannabis extraction, penalties. |
6 | (a) No person, other than a processor complying with this chapter and accompanying |
7 | regulations or an agent of a processor acting in that capacity, may extract compounds from |
8 | cannabis using solvents other than water, glycerin, propylene glycol, vegetable oil, or food grade |
9 | ethanol (ethyl alcohol). No person may extract compounds from cannabis using ethanol in the |
10 | presence or vicinity of open flame. |
11 | (b) A person who violates this section is guilty of a felony punishable by up to three (3) |
12 | years in prison and a fine of up to five thousand dollars ($5,000). |
13 | (c) This section shall not apply to registered compassion centers under chapter 28.6 of |
14 | title 21. |
15 | CHAPTER 28.11 |
16 | CANNABIS REGULATION, CONTROL, AND TAXATION ACT |
17 | 21-28.11-1. Short title. |
18 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Cannabis Regulation, Control, and |
19 | Taxation Act." |
20 | 21-28.11-2. Definitions. |
21 | For purposes of this chapter: |
22 | (1) "Cannabis" means marijuana and all parts of the plant of the genus cannabis, whether |
23 | growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every |
24 | compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, or resin. It |
25 | does not include hemp, the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake |
26 | made from the seeds of the plant, or any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, |
27 | or preparation of the mature stalks (except the resin extracted therefrom), fiber, oil, or cake, or the |
28 | sterilized seed of the plant that is incapable of germination. |
29 | (2) "Cannabis cultivation facility" means an entity that is registered pursuant to this |
30 | chapter, to be exempt from state penalties for manufacturing cannabis or cannabis products, |
31 | cultivating, preparing, packaging, and selling cannabis to a retailer, a cannabis processor, or |
32 | another cannabis cultivation facility, but not for selling cannabis products or selling cannabis to |
33 | the general public. |
34 | (3) "Cannabis establishment" means a cannabis cultivation facility, processor, retailer, or |
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1 | cannabis testing facility. |
2 | (4) "Cannabis processor" means an entity registered pursuant to this chapter, to be |
3 | exempt from state penalties for purchasing cannabis from cannabis cultivation facilities, |
4 | manufacturing cannabis products, and selling, giving, or transferring cannabis products to a |
5 | cannabis retailer or a cannabis testing facility. |
6 | (5) "Cannabis products" means concentrated cannabis and products that are comprised of |
7 | cannabis and other ingredients and are intended for use or consumption, including, but not limited |
8 | to, edible products, ointments, and tinctures. |
9 | (6) "Cannabis testing facility" means an entity that is registered pursuant to this chapter, |
10 | to be exempt from state penalties for testing cannabis for potency and contaminants. |
11 | (7) "Manufacture" and/or "manufacturing" means the production, preparation, |
12 | propagation, compounding, conversion or processing of cannabis, either directly or indirectly, by |
13 | means of chemical synthesis, including any packaging or repackaging of the cannabis or cannabis |
14 | products or labelling or re-labeling its containers. |
15 | (8) "Person" means and includes co-partnerships and bodies corporate and politic. |
16 | (9) "Retailer" means an entity that is registered pursuant to this chapter, to be exempt |
17 | from state penalties for purchasing cannabis from cannabis cultivation facilities, and selling |
18 | cannabis, cannabis products, and cannabis paraphernalia to customers who are twenty-one (21) |
19 | years of age or older. |
20 | (10) "State prosecution" means prosecution initiated or maintained by the state of Rhode |
21 | Island or an agency or political subdivision of the state of Rhode Island. |
22 | 21-28.11-3. Office of Cannabis Coordination. |
23 | (a) To implement the pilot program established in chapter 28.10 of title 21, there is |
24 | hereby created within the office of the governor the office of cannabis coordination, the head of |
25 | which is the director of the office of cannabis coordination. Subject to available appropriations, |
26 | the director of the office shall be assisted by a deputy director and a staff to fulfill the office's |
27 | mission. |
28 | (b) The office of cannabis coordination shall coordinate the executive branch response to |
29 | the regulation of cannabis as directed by the governor. The coordination of the executive branch |
30 | response includes, but is not limited to, strategic planning, coordination and approval of |
31 | regulations, educational content, planning and implementation, community engagement, budget |
32 | coordination, data collection and analysis functions, and any other duties deemed necessary and |
33 | appropriate by the director of the office of cannabis coordination or the governor to carry out the |
34 | provisions of this chapter. |
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1 | (c) In furtherance of coordinating the oversight of the adult use cannabis pilot program |
2 | and adult use medical cannabis across state agencies, the office of cannabis coordination shall: |
3 | (1) Coordinate with the directors and staff of each state agency regarding the agency's |
4 | promulgation and implementation of rules on adult use and medical cannabis with the objective |
5 | of producing positive economic, public safety, and health outcomes for the state and its citizens; |
6 | (2) Offer guidance to and communicate with municipal officials regarding the |
7 | implementation and enforcement of this chapter; |
8 | (3) Align all policy suggestions and the promulgation of rules across state agencies to |
9 | increase efficiency and eliminate unintended negative impacts on the state and its citizens; |
10 | (4) Communicate with regulatory officials from other states that allow cannabis for adult |
11 | use to learn from the experiences of those states; |
12 | (5) Anticipate, prioritize, and respond to emerging issues with the regulation of cannabis; |
13 | (d) The office of cannabis coordination shall have final approval authority for all |
14 | guidelines, rules, and regulations pertaining to the implementation and enforcement of this |
15 | chapter. |
16 | 21-28.11-4. Registration of cannabis establishments. |
17 | Except as otherwise provided in this chapter: |
18 | (1) A person or an entity may apply, in accordance with the provisions of this chapter and |
19 | the regulations adopted pursuant thereto, for the issuance of a registration for operating as a |
20 | retailer or cannabis testing facility pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. |
21 | (2) As directed by the office of cannabis coordination, the department of business |
22 | regulation shall have authority to issue registrations to cannabis cultivators, cannabis retailers, |
23 | and cannabis processors consistent with the provisions set forth in this chapter. |
24 | (3) As directed by the office of cannabis coordination, the department of health shall have |
25 | authority to issue registrations to cannabis testing facilities. |
26 | (4) Subject to the provisions set forth in this chapter, in order to determine which entities |
27 | are to be issued registrations for cannabis establishments, the office of cannabis coordination, in |
28 | coordination with the department of business regulation and the department of health, shall: |
29 | (i) Set forth the procedures for entities to submit applications to become registered |
30 | cannabis establishments, including the content and form for applications; |
31 | (ii) Require remittance of an application fee, which may not exceed five thousand dollars |
32 | ($5,000); |
33 | (iii) Establish minimum qualifications for registration that are directly and demonstrably |
34 | related to the operation of retailers, and cannabis testing facilities; |
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1 | (iv) Set forth procedures to issue registrations to applicants that meet the minimum |
2 | qualifications specified by the office of cannabis coordination. |
3 | (5) The department of business regulation may not issue a cannabis cultivation facility, |
4 | cannabis processor, or retailer registration to any entity that operates or exercises ownership, |
5 | management, or other control over a cannabis testing facility. |
6 | (6) If any person has had an application approved by the department of business |
7 | regulation on or before January 2, 2019 to be licensed as a cultivator pursuant to § 21-28.6-16, |
8 | that person shall be: |
9 | (i) Deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility under the adult use cannabis pilot |
10 | program; and |
11 | (ii) Deemed a registered cannabis processor under the adult use cannabis pilot program. |
12 | (7) Any person deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility or a registered cannabis |
13 | processor pursuant to subsections (6)(i) and (6)(ii) of this section is required to register with the |
14 | department of business regulation and must adhere to all provisions pursuant to chapter 28.6 of |
15 | title 21 and all regulations related to medical marijuana adopted by the office of cannabis |
16 | coordination, the department of business regulation, or the department of health, including, but |
17 | not limited to, the regulations promulgated by the department of business regulation pursuant to § |
18 | 21-28.6-16(d) regarding how many marijuana plants, how many marijuana seedlings, how much |
19 | wet marijuana, and how much usable marijuana a licensed cultivator may possess. This chapter |
20 | shall not affect the licensure status of a cultivator pursuant to § 21-28.6-16. |
21 | (8) Any operation of a registered cannabis cultivation facility or a registered cannabis |
22 | processor pursuant to subsections (6)(i) and (6)(ii) of this section shall be located at the single |
23 | location within the approved square footage that is registered with the department of business |
24 | regulation and the department of public safety pursuant to § 21-28.6-16(i). |
25 | (9) The members of the board of directors or controlling interest owners for compassion |
26 | centers registered pursuant to § 21-28.6-12 shall create a separate and distinct for-profit entity or |
27 | entities for the registration and operation of any cannabis cultivation facility, cannabis processor, |
28 | and retailer. Such entities created pursuant to this subsection shall be: |
29 | (i) Deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility under the adult use cannabis pilot |
30 | program; |
31 | (ii) Deemed a registered cannabis processor under the adult use cannabis pilot program; |
32 | and |
33 | (iii) Deemed a registered retailer under the adult use cannabis pilot program. |
34 | (10) Any person that is deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility, a registered |
| LC000710 - Page 12 of 87 |
1 | cannabis processor and/or a registered retailer pursuant to subsections (9)(i), (9)(ii) and (9)(iii) of |
2 | this section is required to register with the department of business regulation and adhere to all |
3 | provisions pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21 and all regulations related to medical cannabis |
4 | adopted by the office of cannabis coordination, the department of business regulation, or the |
5 | department of health. |
6 | (11) Any person that is deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility and/or a |
7 | registered cannabis processor pursuant to subsections (9)(i) and (9)(ii) of this section is permitted |
8 | to operate as a cannabis cultivation facility and as a cannabis processor at its current location and |
9 | at one additional location under those registrations. This section shall not affect the cultivation |
10 | and/or processing of medical marijuana pursuant to § 21-28.6-12 at the compassion center’s |
11 | physical address registered with the department of business regulation on or before January 2, |
12 | 2019, and/or any additional location permitted by § 21-28.6-12. |
13 | (12) Any person that is deemed a registered retailer pursuant to subsection (9)(iii) of this |
14 | section is permitted to operate as a retailer at the physical address registered with the department |
15 | of business regulation on or before January 2, 2019, for the compassion center and one additional |
16 | location. This section shall not affect the sale and/or provision of medical marijuana pursuant to § |
17 | 21-28.6-12 at the compassion center’s physical address registered with the department of business |
18 | regulation on or before January 2, 2019. |
19 | (13) In addition to the retailer locations permitted in subsection (12) of this section, the |
20 | department of business regulation may issue additional retailer registrations pursuant to the |
21 | application process set forth in § 21-28.11-8(5). |
22 | (14) Any person that is deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility or a registered |
23 | cannabis processor pursuant to subsections (6)(i), (6)(ii), (9)(i) and (9)(ii) of this section shall |
24 | allocate ten percent (10%) of its usable cannabis to the medical marijuana program pursuant to |
25 | chapter 28.6 of title 21. |
26 | (15) The department of health may not issue a cannabis testing facility registration to any |
27 | applicant that operates or exercises ownership, management, or other control over a cannabis |
28 | cultivation facility, compassion center, cannabis product manufacturing facility, or retailer, or that |
29 | shares joint ownership or management with any cultivation facility, compassion center, cannabis |
30 | product manufacturing facility, or retailer. |
31 | (16) The office of cannabis coordination shall determine an annual registration fee, not to |
32 | exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for cannabis processors and cannabis cultivation |
33 | facilities, not to exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for cannabis retailers, and not to exceed |
34 | ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for cannabis testing facilities. The registration fee must be paid |
| LC000710 - Page 13 of 87 |
1 | upon the initial issuance of the registration and every twelve (12) months thereafter. If the |
2 | registration fee is not remitted to the state in a timely manner, the registration shall be revoked. |
3 | (17) The office of cannabis coordination shall set forth procedures to require all owners |
4 | and investors with a five-percent (5%) or greater financial stake in the operation of a proposed |
5 | cannabis establishment to undergo a national background check conducted by the office of the |
6 | attorney general, the state police, a local police department, or some other agency approved by |
7 | the office of cannabis coordination. An application for a cannabis establishment registration may |
8 | be rejected if a background check of an owner or investor reveals past offenses that the office of |
9 | cannabis coordination deems to be disqualifying, except that any nonviolent cannabis offense |
10 | involving one pound (1lb) or less of cannabis, or an equivalent amount pursuant to regulations |
11 | promulgated by the department of health, or three (3) or fewer cannabis plants which was |
12 | committed prior to the effective date of this chapter shall not be considered disqualifying. |
13 | (18) Whenever an entity seeks to renew a registration as a cannabis establishment, the |
14 | office of cannabis coordination shall require the renewal application to include a question |
15 | regarding any Occupational Safety and Health Administration actions. The office of cannabis |
16 | coordination shall consider whether additional regulations are necessary to address any such |
17 | actions in light of worker safety concerns. |
18 | (19) Nothing in this section shall prohibit an entity holding a registration or seeking a |
19 | registration as a cannabis cultivation facility, cannabis processor, or retailer from also holding a |
20 | separate registration or seeking a separate registration for another cannabis cultivation facility, |
21 | cannabis processor, or retailer. |
22 | (20) Nothing in this section shall prohibit an entity holding a registration or seeking a |
23 | registration as a cannabis cultivation facility, cannabis processor, or retailer from also holding a |
24 | registration as a compassion center or licensed cultivator or seeking a registration to operate as a |
25 | compassion center under § 21-28.6-12 or a licensed cultivator under § 21-28.6-16. |
26 | (21) A registered cannabis cultivation facility, cannabis processor, cannabis testing |
27 | facility and retailer may transfer ownership and the registration(s) to any person that meets the |
28 | requirements of chapter 28.11 of title 21. |
29 | 21-28.11-5. Ineligibility for registration. |
30 | (a) A cannabis establishment may not operate, and a prospective cannabis establishment |
31 | may not apply for a registration, if any of the following are true: |
32 | (1) The entity is applying for a registration to operate as a cannabis establishment, and the |
33 | establishment would operate in a location that would violate regulations adopted by the office of |
34 | cannabis coordination pursuant to §§ 21-28.11-7(p) and 21-28.11-7(q); or |
| LC000710 - Page 14 of 87 |
1 | (2) The establishment would be located at a site that is not designated as either an |
2 | industrial, commercial, manufacturing, horticultural, pharmaceutical, or agricultural zone or if the |
3 | proposed location would violate a municipality's zoning ordinance; or |
4 | (3) The establishment would be located in a municipality in which residents have |
5 | approved, by a simple majority referendum, a ban on the kind of cannabis establishment being |
6 | proposed. For purpose of illustration but not limitation, a cannabis retailer may not operate in a |
7 | municipality in which residents have approved by a simple majority referendum a ban on |
8 | cannabis retailers. |
9 | (b) Prior to July 1, 2021, no applicant may operate or apply for registrations to operate |
10 | more than: |
11 | (1) Two (2) retailers; |
12 | (2) Two (2) cannabis cultivation facilities; and |
13 | (3) Two (2) cannabis processors. |
14 | (c) For the purpose of this section, the term "applicant" includes an investor owning ten |
15 | percent (10%) or greater of the business, all members of the board of directors, members of the |
16 | LLC, or partners in the business, and all officers or other managerial employees. It does not |
17 | include non-managerial employees. |
18 | (d) For the purpose of this section, the term "operate" includes owning ten percent (10%) |
19 | or greater of the business, serving as a member of the board of directors, being a member of an |
20 | LLC, being a partner in the business, or acting as an officer or other managerial employee. It does |
21 | not include working as a non-managerial employee. |
22 | 21-28.11-6. Suspension or termination of registration. |
23 | The department of business regulation or department of health may suspend or terminate |
24 | the registration of a cannabis establishment that it issued a registration to if the cannabis |
25 | establishment commits violations of this chapter, regulations issued pursuant to it, or any other |
26 | state or local law. |
27 | 21-28.11-7. Regulation and control of cannabis establishments. |
28 | (a) With input from other governmental agencies, the office of cannabis coordination, the |
29 | department of business regulation, and the department of health shall adopt all regulations |
30 | necessary and convenient to carry out and administer provisions in this chapter. |
31 | (b) The advertisement of cannabis and cannabis products is prohibited with the following |
32 | exceptions: |
33 | (1) A registered cannabis establishment may maintain a website advertising cannabis, |
34 | cannabis products, and cannabis paraphernalia, including the prices of those items; provided, the |
| LC000710 - Page 15 of 87 |
1 | website requires the user to verify that they are twenty-one (21) years of age or older before |
2 | entering. |
3 | (2) A registered cannabis establishment may display signage outside its facility |
4 | displaying the name of the establishment; provided, the signage conforms to all applicable local |
5 | guidelines and rules and does not display imagery of a cannabis leaf or the use of cannabis. |
6 | (3) A registered cannabis establishment may be listed in public phonebooks. |
7 | (4) A registered cannabis establishment and its logo may be listed as a sponsor of a |
8 | charitable event; provided, the logo does not contain imagery of a cannabis leaf or the use of |
9 | cannabis. |
10 | (c) The office of cannabis coordination and the department of business regulation shall |
11 | adopt regulations that specify acceptable forms of packaging for cannabis and cannabis products, |
12 | including, but not limited to, requirements that the packaging be: |
13 | (1) Opaque; and |
14 | (2) Constructed to be significantly difficult for children under five (5) years of age to |
15 | open and not difficult for normal adults to use properly as defined by 16 C.F.R. 1700.20 (1995); |
16 | and |
17 | (3) Designed in a way that is not deemed as especially appealing to children. |
18 | (d) The office of cannabis coordination and the department of business regulation shall |
19 | adopt regulations specifying the content of mandatory labels that must be affixed to all packages |
20 | containing cannabis or cannabis products at the time of sales. These regulations shall include, but |
21 | are not limited to, requirements that the label display: |
22 | (1) The name of the establishment that cultivated the cannabis or produced the cannabis |
23 | product; |
24 | (2) The tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content of the product; |
25 | (3) A "produced on" date; and |
26 | (4) Warnings that state: "Consumption of cannabis impairs your ability to drive a car or |
27 | operate machinery" and "Keep away from children" and, unless federal law has changed to |
28 | accommodate cannabis possession, "Possession of cannabis is illegal under federal law and in |
29 | many states outside of Rhode Island." |
30 | (e) All cannabis establishments are required to utilize an inventory tracking system, |
31 | approved by the department of business regulation that tracks all cannabis from either seed or |
32 | immature plant stage up to and including the point of sale. |
33 | (f) The office of cannabis coordination shall establish security requirements and |
34 | regulations for all cannabis establishments to prevent theft and diversion. Security requirements |
| LC000710 - Page 16 of 87 |
1 | for cannabis establishments shall include, but are not limited to: |
2 | (1) An alarm system, with a backup power source, that alerts security personnel and local |
3 | law enforcement officials of any unauthorized breach; |
4 | (2) Perpetual video surveillance system, with a backup power source, that records video |
5 | surveillance, must be stored for at least two (2) months and be accessible to law enforcement |
6 | officials upon request; |
7 | (3) Protocols that ensure the secure transport, delivery, and storage of cannabis and |
8 | cannabis products; and |
9 | (4) Additional security measures to protect against diversion or theft of cannabis from |
10 | cannabis cultivation facilities that cultivate cannabis outdoors. |
11 | (g) All employees of cannabis establishments must participate in a comprehensive |
12 | training program on standard operating procedures, security protocols, health and sanitation |
13 | standards, workplace safety, and the provisions of this chapter prior to working at the |
14 | establishment. Employees must be retrained on an annual basis, or if state officials discover a |
15 | cannabis establishment in violation of any rule, regulation, or guideline in the course of regular |
16 | inspections or audits. |
17 | (h) While performing duties related to their role as an agent or employee of a cannabis |
18 | establishment, individuals must wear unique identification badges displaying their name and |
19 | photo. |
20 | (i) Any individual that is an agent, employee, partner, owner, or manager for a cannabis |
21 | establishment must be twenty-one (21) years or age or older. |
22 | (j) In coordination with the office of cannabis coordination, the department of business |
23 | regulation and the division of taxation in the department of revenue shall have the authority to |
24 | collect fees and taxes levied on cannabis, and shall adopt procedures for the collection of all taxes |
25 | and fees levied on cannabis. |
26 | (k) The office of cannabis coordination, the department of business regulation, and the |
27 | department of health shall have the authority to inspect and audit cannabis establishments and |
28 | shall adopt procedures for the regular inspection and audit of cannabis establishments. |
29 | (l) Under the direction of the office of cannabis coordination, the department of |
30 | environmental management shall set forth regulations governing the allowable uses of pesticides |
31 | for the cultivation of cannabis. The department of environmental management shall adopt |
32 | procedures to regularly inspect cannabis cultivation facilities to ensure that these regulations are |
33 | followed. Any cannabis cultivation facility found to be in violation of these regulations shall be |
34 | considered in violation of this chapter. |
| LC000710 - Page 17 of 87 |
1 | (m) The office of cannabis coordination and the department of health shall set forth |
2 | regulations for the operation of cannabis testing facilities, including requirements for equipment, |
3 | training, and qualifications for personnel. These regulations shall set forth procedures that require |
4 | random sample testing to ensure quality control, including, but not limited to, ensuring that |
5 | cannabis and cannabis products are accurately labeled for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content. |
6 | The testing analysis must also include testing for residual solvents, poisons, or toxins; harmful |
7 | chemicals; dangerous molds or mildew; filth; and harmful microbials such as E. coli or |
8 | salmonella, and pesticides. |
9 | (n) Before being made available for purchase at retailer establishments, all cannabis and |
10 | cannabis products must undergo random sample testing at a registered cannabis testing facility, or |
11 | other laboratory equipped to test cannabis and cannabis products that has been approved by the |
12 | office of cannabis coordination. |
13 | (o) In coordination with the department of business regulation and department of health, |
14 | the office of cannabis coordination shall adopt regulations regarding edible cannabis products. |
15 | Prior to selling edible cannabis products to cannabis retailers, cannabis processors must submit a |
16 | proposal, which shall include photographs of the proposed product properly packaged and |
17 | labeled, and any other materials deemed necessary by the office of cannabis coordination, to the |
18 | office of cannabis coordination for each line of edible cannabis products. The office of cannabis |
19 | coordination shall develop standards to prohibit cannabis products that pose public health risks, |
20 | that are easily confused with existing non-cannabis products, or that are especially attractive to |
21 | youth. Upon receipt of a proposal for an edible cannabis product line, the office of cannabis |
22 | coordination shall have up to ninety (90) days to deny the product proposal if it conflicts with the |
23 | cannabis product standards. Retailers and cannabis processors may only sell cannabis products |
24 | that have completed this review process. Additional regulations adopted by the office of cannabis |
25 | coordination regarding edible cannabis products shall include, but are not limited to: |
26 | (1) A determination of the amount of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) that constitutes a |
27 | single serving in an edible cannabis product; and |
28 | (2) A requirement that separable edible cannabis products be individually packaged and |
29 | contain no more than a single serving of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as defined in regulations |
30 | adopted by the office of cannabis coordination. |
31 | (p) The office of cannabis coordination shall adopt regulations regarding allowable |
32 | locations for cannabis establishments. Such regulations may include, but are not limited to, |
33 | zoning restrictions and/or minimum distances from public or private preschools, primary schools, |
34 | elementary schools, or secondary schools. |
| LC000710 - Page 18 of 87 |
1 | (q) The office of cannabis coordination shall establish penalties for cannabis |
2 | establishments that violate approved rules and regulations, which may include fines and/or |
3 | revocation of registrations for violations of this chapter or regulations adopted pursuant thereto. |
4 | (r) The department of business regulation shall set forth procedures and a fee, not to |
5 | exceed fifty dollars ($50.00), for individuals twenty-one (21) years or older to purchase unique |
6 | identifier cannabis plant tags, which must be affixed to any cannabis plant grown by an individual |
7 | in a residential space. |
8 | 21-28.11-8. Timeline for implementation of this chapter. |
9 | (1) The governor shall establish the office of cannabis coordination and appoint the |
10 | director of the office of cannabis coordination no later than two (2) months after the effective date |
11 | of this chapter. |
12 | (2) The office of cannabis coordination shall coordinate with the department of business |
13 | regulation to set forth procedures for the applications for the issuance of registrations for cannabis |
14 | retail establishments and minimum requirements for the operation of cannabis retailers no later |
15 | than five (5) months after the effective date of this chapter. Cannabis cultivation facilities, |
16 | cannabis processors, and retailers deemed registered pursuant to §§ 21-28.11-4(6) and (9) shall |
17 | not be required to submit an application for issuance of registration. |
18 | (3) The office of cannabis coordination shall coordinate with the department of health to |
19 | set forth procedures for the application for and issuance of registrations for cannabis testing |
20 | facilities and minimum requirements for the operation of cannabis testing facilities no later than |
21 | five (5) months after the effective date of this chapter. |
22 | (4) On the effective date of this chapter, any person that is deemed a registered retailer |
23 | pursuant to § 21-28.11-4(9)(iii) may register as a retailer with the department of business |
24 | regulation. Within one month of such registration, the department shall issue a retailer registration |
25 | to that person if it is in compliance with all applicable rules and regulations. |
26 | (5) No later than six (6) months after the effective date of this chapter, the department of |
27 | business regulation shall begin accepting applications for retailer registrations, including from |
28 | applicants who are not authorized representatives of properly registered compassion centers. |
29 | (6) Any person that is deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility pursuant to §§ 21- |
30 | 28.11-4(6)(i) and (9)(i) may register a cannabis cultivation facility with the department of |
31 | business regulation. Within one month of such registration, the department of business regulation |
32 | shall issue a cannabis cultivation facility registration to that person if it is in compliance with all |
33 | applicable rules and regulations. |
34 | (7) No later than five (5) months after the effective date of this chapter, the office of |
| LC000710 - Page 19 of 87 |
1 | cannabis coordination shall coordinate with the department of health to adopt regulations |
2 | regarding infused cannabis products and edible cannabis products pursuant to § 21-28.11-7(o). |
3 | (8) Any person that is deemed a registered cannabis cultivation facility or registered |
4 | cannabis processor facility pursuant to §§ 21-28.11-4(6)(i) and (6)(ii) shall register as a cannabis |
5 | processor with the department of business regulation. Within one month of such registration, the |
6 | department of business regulation shall issue a cannabis processor registration to that person if it |
7 | is in compliance with all applicable rules and regulations. |
8 | (9) Beginning five (5) months after the effective date of this chapter, the department of |
9 | health shall accept applications to operate a cannabis testing facility. |
10 | (10) The department of health shall grant a one year registration to at least two (2) |
11 | cannabis testing facilities within six (6) months of the effective date of this chapter. |
12 | (11) The department of health shall grant a one year registration to a total of at least five |
13 | (5) cannabis testing facilities within twelve (12) months of the effective date of this chapter, |
14 | provided a sufficient number of qualified applicants exist. |
15 | (12) If at any time after two (2) years after the effective date of this chapter, there are |
16 | fewer than ten (10) valid cannabis testing facility registrations, the department of health shall |
17 | accept and process applications for cannabis testing facility registrations. |
18 | 21-28.11-9. Municipal control over cannabis establishments. |
19 | (a) Municipalities shall have the authority to enact ordinances or regulations not in |
20 | conflict with this chapter or with rules and regulations adopted by the office of cannabis |
21 | coordination regulating the time, place, and manner of cannabis establishments' operations. |
22 | (b) Prior to January 1, 2021, municipalities may prohibit specific classes of cannabis |
23 | establishments from operating within their jurisdiction. On or after January 1, 2021, |
24 | municipalities may not maintain or impose such prohibitions unless the residents of the |
25 | municipality have approved, by a simple majority referendum in the course of regularly |
26 | scheduled election, a proposal to ban cannabis cultivation facilities, retailers, processors, or |
27 | cannabis testing facilities. Municipalities must hold separate referenda to ban each class of |
28 | cannabis establishment. A single question to ban all classes of cannabis establishments shall not |
29 | be permitted. |
30 | (c) Municipalities may impose civil and criminal penalties on the violation of ordinances |
31 | enacted pursuant to this section. |
32 | 21-28.11-10. Transportation of cannabis. |
33 | The office of cannabis coordination shall set forth regulations and procedures to facilitate |
34 | the secure transportation of cannabis for retailers delivering products to purchasers and shipments |
| LC000710 - Page 20 of 87 |
1 | of cannabis or cannabis products between cannabis establishments. |
2 | 21-28.11-11. Minors on the premises of cannabis establishments. |
3 | (a) A cannabis establishment shall not allow any person who is under twenty-one (21) |
4 | years of age to be present inside any room where cannabis or cannabis products are stored, |
5 | produced, or sold by the cannabis establishment unless the person who is under twenty-one (21) |
6 | years of age is: |
7 | (1) A government employee performing their official duties; |
8 | (2) An elected official, a member of the media, a contractor performing labor that does |
9 | not include cannabis cultivation, manufacturing, packaging, or processing; or |
10 | (3) If the cannabis establishment is a retailer, a medical cannabis patient registered |
11 | pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21, if the retailer premises are also registered as a compassion |
12 | center pursuant to § 21-28.6-12, and the individual under twenty-one (21) years of age is a |
13 | qualifying patient registered under chapter 28.6 of title 21. |
14 | (b) Except as otherwise provided in this section, in a prosecution for a violation of this |
15 | section, it is an absolute defense that before allowing a person who is under twenty-one (21) years |
16 | of age into the room where cannabis is sold or stored, a staff member for the cannabis |
17 | establishment was shown a document which appeared to be issued by an agency of a federal, |
18 | state, tribal, or foreign sovereign government and which indicated that the person who was |
19 | allowed onto the premises of the cannabis establishment was twenty-one (21) years of age or |
20 | older at the time the person was allowed onto the premises. The absolute defense set forth in this |
21 | subsection does not apply if: |
22 | (1) The document which was shown to the person who allowed the person who is under |
23 | twenty-one (21) years of age onto the premises of the retailer was counterfeit, forged, altered, or |
24 | issued to a person other than the person who was allowed onto the premises of the retailer; and |
25 | (2) Under the circumstances, a reasonable person would have known or suspected that the |
26 | document was counterfeit, forged, altered, or issued to a person other than the person who was |
27 | allowed onto the premises. |
28 | 21-28.11-12. Retailer violations. |
29 | (a) A retailer shall not: |
30 | (1) Sell, give, deliver, or otherwise furnish cannabis, cannabis products, or cannabis |
31 | paraphernalia to any person who is under twenty-one (21) years of age unless the individual |
32 | under twenty-one (21) years of age is a qualifying patient registered under chapter 28.6 of title 21. |
33 | (i) The following documents shall serve as acceptable forms of identification for the |
34 | purpose of proving an individual’s age: an armed service identification card, valid passport, the |
| LC000710 - Page 21 of 87 |
1 | identification card license, or any other documentation used for identification purposes that may |
2 | belong to any other person who is twenty-one (21) years or older; a motor vehicle operator's |
3 | license which bears the date of birth of the licensee, and which is issued by this state or any other |
4 | state. |
5 | (ii) If the retailer discovers evidence that the document presented to verify a person’s age |
6 | is inaccurate or falsified in any way to misrepresent the age of the person attempting to purchase |
7 | cannabis or cannabis products, they shall refuse to sell cannabis or cannabis products to that |
8 | individual and notify law enforcement officials. |
9 | (iii) Except where regulations attendant to this chapter specifically modify or provide |
10 | otherwise, rules similar to the rules set forth § 3-8-6, applying to alcohol retailers, shall apply to |
11 | cannabis retailers. |
12 | (iv) Proof of good faith reliance on any misrepresentation is a defense to the prosecution |
13 | of the retailer and/or the retailer’s employer an alleged violation of this section. |
14 | (2) Sell, give, deliver, or otherwise furnish cannabis or cannabis products to any person |
15 | who is twenty-one (21) years of age or older unless the cannabis or cannabis products have |
16 | undergone random sample testing for potency and contaminants at a cannabis testing facility or |
17 | other laboratory equipped to test cannabis and cannabis products that has been approved by the |
18 | office of cannabis coordination. |
19 | (3) Except as provided in this section, sell, deliver, give, or otherwise furnish more than |
20 | the following quantities of cannabis or cannabis products to a person in a single transaction; |
21 | (i) One ounce (1 oz.) of cannabis, not including hashish; |
22 | (ii) Two (2) immature cannabis plants; or |
23 | (iii) Cannabis products containing three hundred milligrams (300mg) of delta-9- |
24 | tetrahydrocannabinol. |
25 | (4) Except as provided in this section, knowingly and willfully sell, give, or otherwise |
26 | furnish an amount of cannabis to a person that would cause that person to possess more than the |
27 | quantities set forth in subsection (3) of this section. |
28 | (5) Purchase cannabis from any person other than a cannabis cultivation facility or |
29 | retailer. |
30 | (6) Purchase cannabis products from any person other than a cannabis processor. |
31 | (7) Violate regulations issued by the office of cannabis coordination. |
32 | (8) Offer customers special deals, coupons, or giveaways that allow avoidance of |
33 | cannabis taxes. Except as otherwise provided by regulation, the tax levied under this subsection |
34 | shall apply to the full price, if non-itemized, of any transaction involving both: |
| LC000710 - Page 22 of 87 |
1 | (i) Cannabis or cannabis products; and |
2 | (ii) Any other otherwise distinct and identifiable goods or services. |
3 | (b) The prohibitions on dispensing cannabis in subsections (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this |
4 | section do not apply in instances where the retailer holds a valid registration as a compassion |
5 | center under chapter 28.6 of title 21, and has verified that the person is a qualifying patient or |
6 | primary caregiver registered under chapter 28.6 of title 21 and the amount of cannabis dispensed |
7 | is within the qualifying patient's limits. |
8 | (c) In addition to any other penalty provided pursuant to specific statutes, a retailer who |
9 | violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by a fine of not more than |
10 | one thousand dollars ($1,000). |
11 | 21-28.11-13. Cannabis cultivation facility violations. |
12 | (a) A cannabis cultivation facility shall not: |
13 | (1) Manufacture, sell give away or otherwise distribute cannabis products; or |
14 | (2) Sell, deliver, give away, or otherwise furnish cannabis products to any person other |
15 | than a cannabis retailer or an agent or staff member acting on behalf of a cannabis retailer; |
16 | (3) Purchase cannabis from any person other than a cannabis cultivation facility; or |
17 | (4) Purchase or sell, deliver, give, or otherwise furnish cannabis products in any manner |
18 | other than as is exempted from state penalties pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and any |
19 | regulations adopted pursuant thereto. |
20 | (b) In addition to any other penalty provided pursuant to specific statutes, a person who |
21 | violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by a fine of not more than |
22 | one thousand dollars ($1,000). |
23 | 21-28.11-14. Cannabis processor facility violations. |
24 | (a) A cannabis processor facility shall not: |
25 | (1) Manufacture, cultivate, or produce cannabis; |
26 | (2) Sell, deliver, give away, or otherwise furnish cannabis products to any person other |
27 | than a cannabis retailer or an agent or staff member acting on behalf of a cannabis retailer; |
28 | (3) Purchase cannabis from any person other than a cannabis cultivation facility; or |
29 | (4) Purchase or sell, deliver, give, or otherwise furnish cannabis products in any manner |
30 | other than as is exempted from state penalties pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and any |
31 | regulations adopted pursuant thereto. |
32 | (b) In addition to any other penalty provided pursuant to specific statutes, a person who |
33 | violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by a fine of not more than |
34 | one thousand dollars ($1,000). |
| LC000710 - Page 23 of 87 |
1 | 21-28.11-15. Wholesale Tax. |
2 | Imposition of wholesale tax on cannabis cultivation facilities and cannabis processors. |
3 | (a) Except as provided for in subjection (b) of this section, a wholesale tax at a rate of |
4 | five percent (5%) shall be imposed on all gross revenue from the wholesale of cannabis, cannabis |
5 | products, seedlings and cuttings from a registered cannabis cultivator facility and/or registered |
6 | cannabis processor to a registered retailer. |
7 | (b) The wholesale tax does not apply to medical cannabis sales from a licensed cultivator |
8 | to a registered compassion center pursuant to § 21-28.6-12 or registered compassion center to a |
9 | registered qualifying patient or a registered primary caregiver pursuant to § 21-28.6-12. |
10 | (c) Under the direction of the office of cannabis coordination, the division of taxation |
11 | shall have the authority to collect the proceeds of the wholesale tax on retail cannabis sales and |
12 | disburse the funds to the cannabis regulation fund pursuant to § 21-28.11-17. |
13 | 21-28.11-16. Excise tax. |
14 | Imposition of excise tax on retail cannabis sales. |
15 | (a) Except as provided for in subsection (b) of this section, an excise tax at a rate of ten |
16 | percent (10%) of the sales price, in addition to the standard sales tax imposed by § 44-18-18, shall |
17 | be imposed on all retail sales of cannabis, cannabis products, seedlings, and cuttings. |
18 | (b) The excise tax does not apply to medical cannabis sales from a registered compassion |
19 | center to a registered qualifying patient or a registered primary caregiver pursuant to § 21-28.6- |
20 | 12. |
21 | (c) Under the direction of the office of cannabis coordination, the division of taxation |
22 | shall have the authority to collect the proceeds of the excise tax on retail cannabis sales and |
23 | disburse the funds to the cannabis regulation fund pursuant to § 21-28.11-17. |
24 | 21-28.11-17. Restricted receipt account and distribution of funds. |
25 | (a) Fees and taxes collected pursuant to this chapter shall be deposited in a restricted |
26 | receipt account entitled "cannabis regulation fund." |
27 | (b) The amounts on deposit in the account for receipts of cannabis excise taxes and fees |
28 | shall be disbursed in the following manner: |
29 | (1) In the 2019 fiscal year budget and every fiscal year budget thereafter, the governor |
30 | shall submit a budget to the general assembly to appropriate funds from the cannabis regulation |
31 | fund to provide for all necessary expenses incurred by the office of cannabis coordination, the |
32 | department of business regulation, the department of health, the division of taxation, and the |
33 | department of environmental management in the performance of their duties pursuant to this |
34 | chapter. |
| LC000710 - Page 24 of 87 |
1 | (2) After sufficient funds are appropriated from the cannabis regulation fund to provide |
2 | for the expenses related to implementation and regulatory enforcement of this chapter, seventy- |
3 | five percent (75%) of remaining funds shall be deposited into the state's general fund and ten |
4 | percent (10%) shall be disbursed to municipalities, proportional to the total number of cannabis |
5 | establishments in each municipality. Five percent (5%) shall be disbursed to the state and local |
6 | police for the purpose of enforcing laws against impaired driving and training additional law |
7 | enforcement officers to become drug recognition experts. Ten percent (10%) shall be disbursed to |
8 | the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, which shall |
9 | distribute funding to various programs and agencies for the purpose of providing substance use |
10 | disorder treatment and recovery services as well as programming for youth substance use |
11 | prevention. |
12 | 21-28.11-18. Contracts enforceable. |
13 | It is the public policy of the state that contracts related to the operation of a cannabis |
14 | establishment, compassion center, or hemp cultivator registered pursuant to Rhode Island law |
15 | shall be enforceable. It is the public policy of the state that no contract entered into by a registered |
16 | cannabis establishment or hemp cultivator or its employees or agents as permitted pursuant to a |
17 | valid registration with a department of the state, or by those who allow property to be used by an |
18 | establishment, its employees, or its agents as permitted pursuant to a valid registration, shall be |
19 | unenforceable on the basis that cultivating, obtaining, manufacturing, distributing, dispensing, |
20 | transporting, selling, possessing, or using cannabis or hemp is prohibited by federal law. |
21 | 21-28.11-19. Compassion center registrants. |
22 | (a) Each cannabis establishment that is at the same location as a compassion center must: |
23 | (1) Follow all provisions pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21, and all regulations related to |
24 | medical cannabis adopted by the office of cannabis coordination, the department of business |
25 | regulation, or the department of health; |
26 | (2) Separate all inventory that is offered for sale or donation to medical cannabis |
27 | cardholders pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21 from cannabis and cannabis products that are |
28 | offered for sale to adult consumers; |
29 | (3) Label all cannabis and cannabis products that are offered for sale to adult consumers |
30 | pursuant to § 21-28.6-12 with "Retail cannabis - for use by adults 21 and older only." |
31 | (b) For purposes of this section, "adult consumer" means a person who is twenty-one (21) |
32 | years of age or older and who is not a medical cannabis cardholder obtaining medical cannabis |
33 | from a compassion center pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21. |
34 | 21-28.11-20. Failure of department to adopt regulations. |
| LC000710 - Page 25 of 87 |
1 | If the office of cannabis coordination fails to adopt regulations to implement this chapter, |
2 | or fails to begin processing applications for cannabis establishments within twelve (12) months of |
3 | the effective date of this chapter, any citizen may commence an action in a court of competent |
4 | jurisdiction to compel the office of cannabis coordination to perform the actions mandated |
5 | pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. |
6 | 21-28.11-21. Severability. |
7 | If any provision of this chapter or its application thereof to any person or circumstance is |
8 | held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of this chapter, which |
9 | can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of |
10 | this chapter are declared to be severable. |
11 | SECTION 2. Sections 21-28-4.1, 21-28-4.1.1 and 21-28-4.1.2 of the General Laws in |
12 | Chapter 21-28 entitled "Uniform Controlled Substances Act" are hereby amended to read as |
13 | follows: |
14 | 21-28-4.01. Prohibited acts A -- Penalties. |
15 | (a)(1) Except as authorized by this chapter or exempted from annual penalties pursuant to |
16 | chapters 28.10 or 28.11 of title 21, it shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture, deliver, or |
17 | possess with intent to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance. |
18 | (2) Any person who is not a drug-addicted person, as defined in § 21-28-1.02(20), who |
19 | violates this subsection with respect to a controlled substance classified in schedule I or II, except |
20 | the substance classified as marijuana, is guilty of a crime and, upon conviction, may be |
21 | imprisoned to a term up to life or fined not more than five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) |
22 | nor less than ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or both. |
23 | (3) Where the deliverance as prohibited in this subsection shall be the proximate cause of |
24 | death to the person to whom the controlled substance is delivered, it shall not be a defense that |
25 | the person delivering the substance was, at the time of delivery, a drug-addicted person as defined |
26 | in § 21-28-1.02(20). |
27 | (4) Any person, under twenty-one (21) years of age, except as provided for in subdivision |
28 | (2) of this subsection, who violates this subsection with respect to the manufacture of two (2) or |
29 | fewer total marijuana plants is guilty of a crime and upon conviction may be imprisoned for not |
30 | more than six (6) months, or fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500), or both: |
31 | (5) Any person, except as provided for in subsections (2) or (4) of this section, who |
32 | violates this subsection with respect to: |
33 | (i) A controlled substance, classified in schedule I or II, is guilty of a crime and, upon |
34 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than thirty (30) years, or fined not more than one |
| LC000710 - Page 26 of 87 |
1 | hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) nor less than three thousand dollars ($3,000), or both; |
2 | (ii) The manufacture of three (3) or more marijuana plants, is guilty of a crime and upon |
3 | conviction may be imprisoned for not more than three (3) years or fined not more than two |
4 | thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) for each plant over the allowed limit of two (2), or both; |
5 | (iii) The delivery of marijuana is guilty of a crime and upon conviction may be |
6 | imprisoned for not more than five (5) years or fined not more than one hundred thousand dollars |
7 | ($100,000), or both; |
8 | (ii) (iv) A controlled substance, classified in schedule III or IV, is guilty of a crime and, |
9 | upon conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than twenty (20) years, or fined not more than |
10 | forty thousand dollars ($40,000), or both; provided, with respect to a controlled substance |
11 | classified in schedule III(d), upon conviction may be imprisoned for not more than five (5) years, |
12 | or fined not more than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000), or both. |
13 | (iii) (v) A controlled substance, classified in schedule V, is guilty of a crime and, upon |
14 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than one year, or fined not more than ten thousand |
15 | dollars ($10,000), or both. |
16 | (b)(1) Except as authorized by this chapter, it is unlawful for any person to create, |
17 | deliver, or possess with intent to deliver, a counterfeit substance. |
18 | (2) Any person who violates this subsection with respect to: |
19 | (i) A counterfeit substance, classified in schedule I or II, is guilty of a crime and, upon |
20 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than thirty (30) years, or fined not more than one |
21 | hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), or both; |
22 | (ii) A counterfeit substance, classified in schedule III or IV, is guilty of a crime and, upon |
23 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than twenty (20) years, or fined not more than forty |
24 | thousand dollars ($40,000), or both; provided, with respect to a controlled substance classified in |
25 | schedule III(d), upon conviction may be imprisoned for not more than five (5) years, or fined not |
26 | more than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000), or both. |
27 | (iii) A counterfeit substance, classified in schedule V, is guilty of a crime and, upon |
28 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than one year, or fined not more than ten thousand |
29 | dollars ($10,000), or both. |
30 | (c)(1) It shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally to possess a |
31 | controlled substance, unless the substance was obtained directly from, or pursuant to, a valid |
32 | prescription or order of a practitioner while acting in the course of his or her professional |
33 | practice, or except as otherwise authorized by this chapter or exempt from arrest by chapters |
34 | 28.10 or 28.11 of title 21. |
| LC000710 - Page 27 of 87 |
1 | (2) Any person who violates this subsection with respect to: |
2 | (i) A controlled substance classified in schedules I, II and III, IV, and V, except the |
3 | substance classified as marijuana, is guilty of a crime and, upon conviction, may be imprisoned |
4 | for not more than three (3) years, or fined not less than five hundred dollars ($500) nor more than |
5 | five thousand dollars ($5,000), or both; |
6 | (ii) More than one ounce (1 oz.) of a controlled substance classified in schedule I as |
7 | marijuana is guilty of a misdemeanor, except for those persons subject to (a)(1), and, upon |
8 | conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than one year, or fined not less than two hundred |
9 | dollars ($200) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500), or both. |
10 | (iii) Notwithstanding any public, special, or general law to the contrary, the possession of |
11 | one ounce (1 oz.) or less of marijuana by a person who is eighteen (18) years of age or older, but |
12 | who is less than twenty-one (21) years of age, and who is not exempted from penalties pursuant |
13 | to chapter 28.6 of this title, shall constitute a civil offense, rendering the offender liable to a civil |
14 | penalty in the amount of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and forfeiture of the marijuana, but not |
15 | to any other form of criminal or civil punishment or disqualification. Notwithstanding any public, |
16 | special, or general law to the contrary, this civil penalty of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and |
17 | forfeiture of the marijuana shall apply if the offense is the first (1st) or second (2nd) violation |
18 | within the previous eighteen (18) months. |
19 | (iv) Notwithstanding any public, special, or general law to the contrary, possession of one |
20 | ounce (1 oz.) or less of marijuana by a person who is seventeen (17) years of age or older and |
21 | under the age of eighteen (18) years, and who is not exempted from penalties pursuant to chapter |
22 | 28.6 of this title, shall constitute a civil offense, rendering the offender liable to a civil penalty in |
23 | the amount of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and forfeiture of the marijuana; provided the |
24 | minor offender completes an approved, drug-awareness program and community service as |
25 | determined by the court. If the person seventeen (17) years of age or older and under the age of |
26 | eighteen (18) years fails to complete an approved, drug-awareness program and community |
27 | service within one year of the disposition, the penalty shall be a three hundred dollar ($300) civil |
28 | fine and forfeiture of the marijuana, except that if no drug-awareness program or community |
29 | service is available, the penalty shall be a fine of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and forfeiture |
30 | of the marijuana. The parents or legal guardian of any offender seventeen (17) years of age or |
31 | older and under the age of eighteen (18) shall be notified of the offense and the availability of a |
32 | drug-awareness and community-service program. The drug-awareness program must be approved |
33 | by the court, but shall, at a minimum, provide four (4) hours of instruction or group discussion |
34 | and ten (10) hours of community service. Notwithstanding any other public, special, or general |
| LC000710 - Page 28 of 87 |
1 | law to the contrary, this civil penalty shall apply if the offense is the first or second violation |
2 | within the previous eighteen (18) months. |
3 | (v) Notwithstanding any public, special, or general law to the contrary, a person who is |
4 | less than twenty-one (21) years of age, not exempted from penalties pursuant to chapter 28.6 of |
5 | this title found in possession of one ounce (1 oz.) or less of marijuana is guilty of a misdemeanor |
6 | and, upon conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than thirty (30) days, or fined not less than |
7 | two hundred dollars ($200) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500), or both, if that person has |
8 | been previously adjudicated on a violation for possession of less than one ounce (1 oz.) of |
9 | marijuana under (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) two (2) times in the eighteen (18) months prior to the third |
10 | (3rd) offense. |
11 | (vi) Any unpaid civil fine issued under (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) shall double to three |
12 | hundred dollars ($300) if not paid within thirty (30) days of the disposition. The civil fine shall |
13 | double again to six hundred dollars ($600) if it has not been paid within ninety (90) days. |
14 | (vii) No person may be arrested for a violation of (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) of this |
15 | subsection except as provided in this subparagraph. Any person in possession of an identification |
16 | card, license, or other form of identification issued by the state or any state, city, or town, or any |
17 | college or university, who fails to produce the same upon request of a police officer who informs |
18 | the person that he or she has been found in possession of what appears to the officer to be one |
19 | ounce (1 oz.) or less of marijuana, or any person without any such forms of identification who |
20 | fails or refuses to truthfully provide his or her name, address, and date of birth to a police officer |
21 | who has informed such person that the officer intends to provide such individual with a citation |
22 | for possession of one ounce (1 oz.) or less of marijuana, may be arrested. |
23 | (viii) No violation of (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) of this subsection shall be considered a |
24 | violation of parole or probation. |
25 | (ix) Any records collected by any state agency, tribunal, or the family court that include |
26 | personally identifiable information about violations of (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) shall not be open to |
27 | public inspection in accordance with § 8-8.2-21. |
28 | (3) Jurisdiction. Any and all violations of (c)(2)(iii) and (c)(2)(iv) shall be the exclusive |
29 | jurisdiction of the Rhode Island traffic tribunal. All money associated with the civil fine issued |
30 | under (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) shall be payable to the Rhode Island traffic tribunal. Fifty percent |
31 | (50%) of all fines collected by the Rhode Island traffic tribunal from civil penalties issued |
32 | pursuant to (c)(2)(iii) or (c)(2)(iv) shall be expended on drug-awareness and treatment programs |
33 | for youth. |
34 | (4) Additionally, every person convicted or who pleads nolo contendere under (c)(2)(i) or |
| LC000710 - Page 29 of 87 |
1 | convicted or who pleads nolo contendere a second or subsequent time under (c)(2)(ii), who is not |
2 | sentenced to a term of imprisonment to serve for the offense, shall be required to: |
3 | (i) Perform up to one hundred (100) hours of community service; |
4 | (ii) Attend and complete a drug-counseling and education program, as prescribed, by the |
5 | director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals and |
6 | pay the sum of four hundred dollars ($400) to help defray the costs of this program which shall be |
7 | deposited as general revenues. Failure to attend may result, after hearing by the court, in jail |
8 | sentence up to one year; |
9 | (iii) The court shall not suspend any part or all of the imposition of the fee required by |
10 | this subsection, unless the court finds an inability to pay; |
11 | (iv) If the offense involves the use of any automobile to transport the substance or the |
12 | substance is found within an automobile, then a person convicted or who pleads nolo contendere |
13 | under (c)(2)(i) and (c)(2)(ii) shall be subject to a loss of license for a period of six (6) months for |
14 | a first offense and one year for each offense after. |
15 | (5) All fees assessed and collected pursuant to (c)(3)(ii) shall be deposited as general |
16 | revenues and shall be collected from the person convicted or who pleads nolo contendere before |
17 | any other fines authorized by this chapter. |
18 | (d) It shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture, distribute, or possess with intent to |
19 | manufacture or distribute, an imitation controlled substance. Any person who violates this |
20 | subsection is guilty of a crime and, upon conviction, shall be subject to the same term of |
21 | imprisonment and/or fine as provided by this chapter for the manufacture or distribution of the |
22 | controlled substance that the particular imitation controlled substance forming the basis of the |
23 | prosecution was designed to resemble and/or represented to be; but in no case shall the |
24 | imprisonment be for more than five (5) years nor the fine for more than twenty thousand dollars |
25 | ($20,000). |
26 | (e) It shall be unlawful for a practitioner to prescribe, order, distribute, supply, or sell an |
27 | anabolic steroid or human growth hormone for: (1) Enhancing performance in an exercise, sport, |
28 | or game, or (2) Hormonal manipulation intended to increase muscle mass, strength, or weight |
29 | without a medical necessity. Any person who violates this subsection is guilty of a misdemeanor |
30 | and, upon conviction, may be imprisoned for not more than six (6) months or a fine of not more |
31 | than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or both. |
32 | (f) It is unlawful for any person to knowingly or intentionally possess, manufacture, |
33 | distribute, or possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, any extract, compound, salt |
34 | derivative, or mixture of salvia divinorum or datura stramonium or its extracts unless the person |
| LC000710 - Page 30 of 87 |
1 | is exempt pursuant to the provisions of § 21-28-3.30. Notwithstanding any laws to the contrary, |
2 | any person who violates this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, may be |
3 | imprisoned for not more than one year, or fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or |
4 | both. The provisions of this section shall not apply to licensed physicians, pharmacists, and |
5 | accredited hospitals and teaching facilities engaged in the research or study of salvia divinorum or |
6 | datura stramonium and shall not apply to any person participating in clinical trials involving the |
7 | use of salvia divinorum or datura stramonium. |
8 | 21-28-4.01.1. Minimum sentence -- Certain quantities of controlled substances. |
9 | (a) Except as authorized by this chapter, it shall be unlawful for any person to |
10 | manufacture, sell, or possess with intent to manufacture or sell, a controlled substance classified |
11 | in schedule I or II (excluding marijuana) or to possess or deliver the following enumerated |
12 | quantities of certain controlled substances: |
13 | (1) One ounce (1 oz.) to one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a |
14 | detectable amount of heroin; |
15 | (2) One ounce (1 oz.) to one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a |
16 | detectable amount of: |
17 | (i) Coca leaves, except coca leaves and extracts of coca leaves from which cocaine, |
18 | ecgonine, and derivatives of ecgonine or their salts have been removed; |
19 | (ii) Cocaine, its salts, optical and geometric isomers, and salts of isomers; |
20 | (iii) Ecgonine, its derivatives, their salts, isomers, and salts of isomers; or |
21 | (iv) Any compound, mixture, or preparation that contains any quantity of any of the |
22 | substances referred to in paragraphs (i) -- (iii) of this subdivision; |
23 | (3) One gram (1 g.) to ten grams (10 gs.) of phencyclidine (PCP) or one hundred (100) to |
24 | one thousand (1,000) tablets of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of |
25 | phencyclidine (PCP); |
26 | (4) One-tenth of a gram (0.1 g.) to one gram (1 g.) of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) or |
27 | one hundred (100) to one thousand (1,000) tablets of a mixture or substance containing a |
28 | detectable amount of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD); |
29 | (5) One kilogram (1 kg.) to five kilograms (5 kgs.) of a mixture containing a detectable |
30 | amount of marijuana; |
31 | (6) One ounce (1 oz.) to one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a |
32 | detectable amount of synthetic drugs; or |
33 | (7) One ounce (1 oz.) to one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a |
34 | detectable amount of fentanyl. |
| LC000710 - Page 31 of 87 |
1 | (b) Any person who violates this section shall be guilty of a crime, and upon conviction, |
2 | may be imprisoned for a term up to fifty (50) years and fined not more than five hundred |
3 | thousand dollars ($500,000). |
4 | 21-28-4.01.2. Minimum sentence -- Certain quantities of controlled substances. |
5 | (a) Except as authorized by the chapter, it shall be unlawful for any person to possess, |
6 | manufacture, sell, or deliver the following enumerated quantities of certain controlled substances: |
7 | (1) More than one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a detectable |
8 | amount of heroin; |
9 | (2) More than one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a detectable |
10 | amount of: |
11 | (i) Coca leaves, except coca leaves and extracts of coca leaves from which cocaine, |
12 | ecgonine, and derivatives of ecgonine or their salts have been removed; |
13 | (ii) Cocaine, its salts, optical and geometric isomers, and salts of isomers; |
14 | (iii) Ecgonine, its derivatives, their salts, isomers, and salts of isomers; or |
15 | (iv) Any compound, mixture, or preparation that contains any quantity of any of the |
16 | substances referred to in paragraphs (i) -- (iii) of this subdivision; |
17 | (3) More than ten grams (10 gs.) of phencyclidine (PCP) or more than one thousand |
18 | (1,000) tablets of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of phencyclidine (PCP); |
19 | (4) More than one gram (1 g.) of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD); or more than one |
20 | thousand (1,000) tablets of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of lysergic acid |
21 | diethylamide (LSD); |
22 | (5) More than five kilograms (5 kgs.) of a mixture containing a detectable amount of |
23 | marijuana; |
24 | (6) More than one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a detectable |
25 | amount of synthetic drugs; or |
26 | (7) More than one kilogram (1 kg.) of a mixture or substance containing a detectable |
27 | amount of fentanyl. |
28 | (b) Any person who violates this section shall be guilty of a crime, and upon conviction, |
29 | may be imprisoned for a term up to life and fined not more than one million dollars ($1,000,000). |
30 | SECTION 3. Sections 21-28.6-3 and 21-28.6-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 21-28.6 |
31 | entitled "The Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act" are hereby |
32 | amended to read as follows: |
33 | 21-28.6-3. Definitions. |
34 | For the purposes of this chapter: |
| LC000710 - Page 32 of 87 |
1 | (1) "Authorized purchaser" means a natural person who is at least twenty-one (21) years |
2 | old and who is registered with the department of health for the purposes of assisting a qualifying |
3 | patient in purchasing marijuana from a compassion center. An authorized purchaser may assist no |
4 | more than one patient, and is prohibited from consuming marijuana obtained for the use of the |
5 | qualifying patient. An authorized purchaser shall be registered with the department of health and |
6 | shall possesses a valid registry identification card. |
7 | (2) "Cardholder" means a person who has been registered or licensed with the department |
8 | of health or the department of business regulation pursuant to this chapter and possesses a valid |
9 | registry identification card or license. |
10 | (3) "Commercial unit" means a building, office, suite, or room within a commercial or |
11 | industrial building for use by one business or person and is rented or owned by that business or |
12 | person. |
13 | (4)(i) "Compassion center" means a not-for-profit corporation, subject to the provisions |
14 | of chapter 6 of title 7 a business entity, and registered under § 21-28.6-12, that acquires, |
15 | possesses, cultivates, manufactures, delivers, transfers, transports, supplies, or dispenses |
16 | marijuana, and/or related supplies and educational materials, to patient cardholders and/or their |
17 | registered caregiver cardholder or authorized purchaser. |
18 | (ii) "Compassion center cardholder" means a principal officer, board member, employee, |
19 | volunteer, or agent of a compassion center who has registered with the department of health or |
20 | the department of business regulation and has been issued and possesses a valid, registry |
21 | identification card. |
22 | (5) "Debilitating medical condition" means: |
23 | (i) Cancer, glaucoma, positive status for human immunodeficiency virus, acquired |
24 | immune deficiency syndrome, Hepatitis C, post-traumatic stress disorder, or the treatment of |
25 | these conditions; |
26 | (ii) A chronic or debilitating disease or medical condition, or its treatment, that produces |
27 | one or more of the following: cachexia or wasting syndrome; severe, debilitating, chronic pain; |
28 | severe nausea; seizures, including but not limited to, those characteristic of epilepsy; or severe |
29 | and persistent muscle spasms, including but not limited to, those characteristic of multiple |
30 | sclerosis or Crohn's disease; or agitation of Alzheimer's Disease; or |
31 | (iii) Any other medical condition or its treatment approved by the department, as |
32 | provided for in § 21-28.6-5. |
33 | (6) "Department of business regulation" means the Rhode Island department of business |
34 | regulation or its successor agency. |
| LC000710 - Page 33 of 87 |
1 | (7) "Department of health" means the Rhode Island department of health or its successor |
2 | agency. |
3 | (8) "Department of public safety" means the Rhode Island department of public safety or |
4 | its successor agency. |
5 | (9) "Dried, useable marijuana" means the dried leaves and flowers of the marijuana plant |
6 | as defined by regulations promulgated by the department of health. |
7 | (10) "Dwelling unit" means the room, or group of rooms, within a dwelling used or |
8 | intended for use by one family or household, or by no more than three (3) unrelated individuals, |
9 | for living, sleeping, cooking, and eating. |
10 | (11) "Equivalent amount" means the portion of usable marijuana, be it in extracted, |
11 | edible, concentrated, or any other form, found to be equal to a portion of dried, usable marijuana, |
12 | as defined by regulations promulgated by the department of health. |
13 | (12) "Licensed cultivator" means a person, as identified in § 43-3-6, who has been |
14 | licensed by the department of business regulation to cultivate marijuana pursuant to § 21-28.6-16. |
15 | (13) "Marijuana" has the meaning given that term in § 21-28-1.02(30). |
16 | (14) "Mature marijuana plant" means a marijuana plant that has flowers or buds that are |
17 | readily observable by an unaided visual examination. |
18 | (15) "Medical marijuana testing laboratory" means a third-party analytical testing |
19 | laboratory licensed by the department of health to collect and test samples of medical marijuana |
20 | pursuant to regulations promulgated by the department. |
21 | (16) "Medical use" means the acquisition, possession, cultivation, manufacture, use, |
22 | delivery, transfer, or transportation of marijuana or paraphernalia relating to the consumption of |
23 | marijuana to alleviate a patient cardholder's debilitating medical condition or symptoms |
24 | associated with the medical condition. |
25 | (17) "Practitioner" means a person who is licensed with authority to prescribe drugs |
26 | pursuant to chapters 34, 37, and 54 of title 5, who may provide a qualifying patient with a written |
27 | certification in accordance with regulations promulgated by the department of health or a |
28 | physician licensed with authority to prescribe drugs in Massachusetts or Connecticut. |
29 | (18) "Primary caregiver" means a natural person who is at least twenty-one (21) years |
30 | old. A primary caregiver may assist no more than five (5) qualifying patients with their medical |
31 | use of marijuana. |
32 | (19) "Qualifying patient" means a person who has been diagnosed by a practitioner as |
33 | having a debilitating medical condition and is a resident of Rhode Island. |
34 | (20) "Registry identification card" means a document issued by the department of health |
| LC000710 - Page 34 of 87 |
1 | that identifies a person as a registered qualifying patient, a registered primary caregiver, or |
2 | authorized purchaser, or a document issued by the department of business regulation that |
3 | identifies a person as a registered principal officer, board member, employee, volunteer, or agent |
4 | of a compassion center. |
5 | (21) "Seedling" means a marijuana plant with no observable flowers or buds. |
6 | (22) "Unusable marijuana" means marijuana seeds, stalks, seedlings, and unusable roots. |
7 | (23) "Usable marijuana" means the dried leaves and flowers of the marijuana plant, and |
8 | any mixture or preparation thereof, but does not include the seeds, stalks, and roots of the plant. |
9 | (24) "Wet marijuana" means the harvested leaves and flowers of the marijuana plant |
10 | before they have reached a dry useable state, as defined by regulations promulgated by the |
11 | departments of health and business regulation. |
12 | (25) "Written certification" means the qualifying patient's medical records, and a |
13 | statement signed by a practitioner, stating that, in the practitioner's professional opinion, the |
14 | potential benefits of the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for the |
15 | qualifying patient. A written certification shall be made only in the course of a bona fide, |
16 | practitioner-patient relationship after the practitioner has completed a full assessment of the |
17 | qualifying patient's medical history. The written certification shall specify the qualifying patient's |
18 | debilitating medical condition or conditions. |
19 | 21-28.6-12. Compassion centers. |
20 | (a) A compassion center registered under this section may acquire, possess, cultivate, |
21 | manufacture, deliver, transfer, transport, supply, or dispense marijuana, or related supplies and |
22 | educational materials, to registered qualifying patients and their registered primary caregivers or |
23 | authorized purchasers. Except as specifically provided to the contrary, all provisions of the |
24 | Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act, §§ 21-28.6-1 -- 21-28.6-11, |
25 | apply to a compassion center unless they conflict with a provision contained in § 21-28.6-12. |
26 | (b) Registration of compassion centers--authority of the departments of health and |
27 | business regulation: |
28 | (1) Not later than ninety (90) days after the effective date of this chapter, the department |
29 | of health shall promulgate regulations governing the manner in which it shall consider |
30 | applications for registration certificates for compassion centers, including regulations governing: |
31 | (i) The form and content of registration and renewal applications; |
32 | (ii) Minimum oversight requirements for compassion centers; |
33 | (iii) Minimum record-keeping requirements for compassion centers; |
34 | (iv) Minimum security requirements for compassion centers; and |
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1 | (v) Procedures for suspending, revoking, or terminating the registration of compassion |
2 | centers that violate the provisions of this section or the regulations promulgated pursuant to this |
3 | subsection. |
4 | (2) Within ninety (90) days of the effective date of this chapter, the department of health |
5 | shall begin accepting applications for the operation of a single compassion center. |
6 | (3) Within one hundred fifty (150) days of the effective date of this chapter, the |
7 | department of health shall provide for at least one public hearing on the granting of an application |
8 | to a single compassion center. |
9 | (4) Within one hundred ninety (190) days of the effective date of this chapter, the |
10 | department of health shall grant a single registration certificate to a single compassion center, |
11 | providing at least one applicant has applied who meets the requirements of this chapter. |
12 | (5) If at any time after fifteen (15) months after the effective date of this chapter, there is |
13 | no operational compassion center in Rhode Island, the department of health shall accept |
14 | applications, provide for input from the public, and issue a registration certificate for a |
15 | compassion center if a qualified applicant exists. |
16 | (6) Within two (2) years of the effective date of this chapter, the department of health |
17 | shall begin accepting applications to provide registration certificates for two (2) additional |
18 | compassion centers. The department shall solicit input from the public, and issue registration |
19 | certificates if qualified applicants exist. |
20 | (7)(i) Any time a compassion center registration certificate is revoked, is relinquished, or |
21 | expires on or before December 31, 2016, the department of health shall accept applications for a |
22 | new compassion center. |
23 | (ii) Any time a compassion center registration certificate is revoked, is relinquished, or |
24 | expires on or after January 1, 2017, the department of business regulation shall accept |
25 | applications for a new compassion center. |
26 | (8) If at any time after three (3) years after the effective date of this chapter and on or |
27 | before December 31, 2016, fewer than three (3) compassion centers are holding valid registration |
28 | certificates in Rhode Island, the department of health shall accept applications for a new |
29 | compassion center. If at any time on or after January 1, 2017, fewer than three (3) compassion |
30 | centers are holding valid registration certificates in Rhode Island, the department of business |
31 | regulation shall accept applications for a new compassion center. No more than three (3) |
32 | compassion centers may hold valid registration certificates at one time. |
33 | (9) Any compassion center application selected for approval by the department of health |
34 | on or before December 31, 2016, or selected for approval by the department of business |
| LC000710 - Page 36 of 87 |
1 | regulation on or after January 1, 2017, shall remain in full force and effect, notwithstanding any |
2 | provisions of this chapter to the contrary, and shall be subject to state law adopted herein and |
3 | rules and regulations adopted by the departments of health and business regulation subsequent to |
4 | passage of this legislation. |
5 | (c) Compassion center and agent applications and registration: |
6 | (1) Each application for a compassion center shall include: |
7 | (i) A non-refundable application fee paid to the department in the amount of two hundred |
8 | fifty dollars ($250); |
9 | (ii) The proposed legal name and proposed articles of incorporation of the compassion |
10 | center; |
11 | (iii) The proposed physical address of the compassion center, if a precise address has |
12 | been determined, or, if not, the general location where it would be located. This may include a |
13 | second location for the cultivation of medical marijuana; |
14 | (iv) A description of the enclosed, locked facility that would be used in the cultivation of |
15 | marijuana; |
16 | (v) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of |
17 | the compassion center; |
18 | (vi) Proposed security and safety measures that shall include at least one security alarm |
19 | system for each location, planned measures to deter and prevent the unauthorized entrance into |
20 | areas containing marijuana and the theft of marijuana, as well as a draft, employee-instruction |
21 | manual including security policies, safety and security procedures, personal safety, and crime- |
22 | prevention techniques; and |
23 | (vii) Proposed procedures to ensure accurate record keeping; |
24 | (2)(i) For applications submitted on or before December 31, 2016, any time one or more |
25 | compassion center registration applications are being considered, the department of health shall |
26 | also allow for comment by the public and shall solicit input from registered qualifying patients, |
27 | registered primary caregivers; and the towns or cities where the applicants would be located; |
28 | (ii) For applications submitted on or after January 1, 2017, any time one or more |
29 | compassion center registration applications are being considered, the department of business |
30 | regulation shall also allow for comment by the public and shall solicit input from registered |
31 | qualifying patients, registered primary caregivers; and the towns or cities where the applicants |
32 | would be located. |
33 | (3) Each time a compassion center certificate is granted, the decision shall be based upon |
34 | the overall health needs of qualified patients and the safety of the public, including, but not |
| LC000710 - Page 37 of 87 |
1 | limited to, the following factors: |
2 | (i) Convenience to patients from throughout the state of Rhode Island to the compassion |
3 | centers if the applicant were approved; |
4 | (ii) The applicant's ability to provide a steady supply to the registered qualifying patients |
5 | in the state; |
6 | (iii) The applicant's experience running a non-profit or business; |
7 | (iv) The interests of qualifying patients regarding which applicant be granted a |
8 | registration certificate; |
9 | (v) The interests of the city or town where the dispensary would be located; |
10 | (vi) The sufficiency of the applicant's plans for record keeping and security, which |
11 | records shall be considered confidential health-care information under Rhode Island law and are |
12 | intended to be deemed protected health-care information for purposes of the Federal Health |
13 | Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, as amended; and |
14 | (vii) The sufficiency of the applicant's plans for safety and security, including proposed |
15 | location, security devices employed, and staffing; |
16 | (4) A compassion center approved by the department of health on or before December |
17 | 31, 2016, shall submit the following to the department before it may begin operations: |
18 | (i) A fee paid to the department in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000); |
19 | (ii) The legal name and articles of incorporation of the compassion center; |
20 | (iii) The physical address of the compassion center; this may include a second address for |
21 | the secure cultivation of marijuana; |
22 | (iv) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of |
23 | the compassion center; and |
24 | (v) The name, address, and date of birth of any person who will be an agent of, employee, |
25 | or volunteer of the compassion center at its inception. |
26 | (5) A compassion center approved by the department of business regulation on or after |
27 | January 1, 2017, shall submit the following to the department before it may begin operations: |
28 | (i) A fee paid to the department in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000); |
29 | (ii) The legal name and articles of incorporation of the compassion center; |
30 | (iii) The physical address of the compassion center; this may include a second address for |
31 | the secure cultivation of marijuana; |
32 | (iv) The name, address, and date of birth of each principal officer and board member of |
33 | the compassion center; |
34 | (v) The name, address, and date of birth of any person who will be an agent of, employee, |
| LC000710 - Page 38 of 87 |
1 | or volunteer of the compassion center at its inception. |
2 | (6) Except as provided in subdivision (7), the department of health or the department of |
3 | business regulation shall issue each principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, and |
4 | employee of a compassion center a registry identification card or renewal card after receipt of the |
5 | person's name, address, date of birth; a fee in an amount established by the department of health |
6 | or the department business regulation; and notification to the department of health or the |
7 | department of business regulation by the department of public safety division of state police that |
8 | the registry identification card applicant has not been convicted of a felony drug offense or has |
9 | not entered a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense and received a sentence of |
10 | probation. Each card shall specify that the cardholder is a principal officer, board member, agent, |
11 | volunteer, or employee of a compassion center and shall contain the following: |
12 | (i) The name, address, and date of birth of the principal officer, board member, agent, |
13 | volunteer, or employee; |
14 | (ii) The legal name of the compassion center to which the principal officer, board |
15 | member, agent, volunteer, or employee is affiliated; |
16 | (iii) A random identification number that is unique to the cardholder; |
17 | (iv) The date of issuance and expiration date of the registry identification card; and |
18 | (v) A photograph, if the department of health or the department of business regulation |
19 | decides to require one. |
20 | (7) Except as provided in this subsection, neither the department of health nor the |
21 | department of business regulation shall issue a registry identification card to any principal officer, |
22 | board member, agent, volunteer, or employee of a compassion center who has been convicted of a |
23 | felony drug offense or has entered a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense and |
24 | received a sentence of probation. If a registry identification card is denied, the compassion center |
25 | will be notified in writing of the purpose for denying the registry identification card. A registry |
26 | identification card may be granted if the offense was for conduct that occurred prior to the |
27 | enactment of the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act or that was |
28 | prosecuted by an authority other than the state of Rhode Island and for which the Edward O. |
29 | Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act would otherwise have prevented a |
30 | conviction. |
31 | (i) All registry identification card applicants shall apply to the department of public safety |
32 | division of state police for a national criminal identification records check that shall include |
33 | fingerprints submitted to the federal bureau of investigation. Upon the discovery of a felony drug |
34 | offense conviction or a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense with a sentence of |
| LC000710 - Page 39 of 87 |
1 | probation, and in accordance with the rules promulgated by the department of health and the |
2 | department of business regulation, the department of public safety division of state police shall |
3 | inform the applicant, in writing, of the nature of the felony and the department of public safety |
4 | division of state police shall notify the department of health or the department of business |
5 | regulation, in writing, without disclosing the nature of the felony, that a felony drug offense |
6 | conviction or a plea of nolo contendere for a felony drug offense with probation has been found. |
7 | (ii) In those situations in which no felony drug offense conviction or plea of nolo |
8 | contendere for a felony drug offense with probation has been found, the department of public |
9 | safety division of state police shall inform the applicant and the department of health or the |
10 | department of business regulation, in writing, of this fact. |
11 | (iii) All registry identification card applicants shall be responsible for any expense |
12 | associated with the criminal background check with fingerprints. |
13 | (8) A registry identification card of a principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, |
14 | or employee shall expire one year after its issuance, or upon the expiration of the registered |
15 | organization's registration certificate, or upon the termination of the principal officer, board |
16 | member, agent, volunteer or employee's relationship with the compassion center, whichever |
17 | occurs first. |
18 | (9) A compassion center cardholder shall notify and request approval from the |
19 | department of business regulation of any change in his or her name or address within ten (10) |
20 | days of such change. A compassion center cardholder who fails to notify the department of |
21 | business regulation of any of these changes is responsible for a civil infraction, punishable by a |
22 | fine of no more than one hundred fifty dollars ($150). |
23 | (10) When a compassion center cardholder notifies the department of health or the |
24 | department of business regulation of any changes listed in this subsection, the department shall |
25 | issue the cardholder a new registry identification card within ten (10) days of receiving the |
26 | updated information and a ten-dollar ($10.00) fee. |
27 | (11) If a compassion center cardholder loses his or her registry identification card, he or |
28 | she shall notify the department of health or the department of business regulation and submit a |
29 | ten-dollar ($10.00) fee within ten (10) days of losing the card. Within five (5) days, the |
30 | department shall issue a new registry identification card with new random identification number. |
31 | (12) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center cardholder shall notify the |
32 | department of health of any disqualifying criminal convictions as defined in subdivision (c)(7). |
33 | The department of health may choose to suspend and/or revoke his or her registry identification |
34 | card after such notification. |
| LC000710 - Page 40 of 87 |
1 | (13) On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion center cardholder shall notify the |
2 | department of business regulation of any disqualifying criminal convictions as defined in |
3 | subdivision (c)(7). The department of business regulation may choose to suspend and/or revoke |
4 | his or her registry identification card after such notification. |
5 | (14) If a compassion center cardholder violates any provision of this chapter or |
6 | regulations promulgated hereunder as determined by the departments of health and business |
7 | regulation, his or her registry identification card may be suspended and/or revoked. |
8 | (d) Expiration or termination of compassion center: |
9 | (1) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center's registration shall expire two |
10 | (2) years after its registration certificate is issued. On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion |
11 | center's registration shall expire one year after its registration certificate is issued. The |
12 | compassion center may submit a renewal application beginning sixty (60) days prior to the |
13 | expiration of its registration certificate; |
14 | (2) The department of health or the department of business regulation shall grant a |
15 | compassion center's renewal application within thirty (30) days of its submission if the following |
16 | conditions are all satisfied: |
17 | (i) The compassion center submits the materials required under subdivisions (c)(4) and |
18 | (c)(5), including a two hundred fifty thousand dollar ($250,000) fifty thousand dollar ($50,000) |
19 | fee; |
20 | (ii) The compassion center's registration has never been suspended for violations of this |
21 | chapter or regulations issued pursuant to this chapter; and |
22 | (iii) The department of health and the department of business regulation find that the |
23 | compassion center is adequately providing patients with access to medical marijuana at |
24 | reasonable rates; |
25 | (3) If the department of health or the department of business regulation determines that |
26 | any of the conditions listed in paragraphs (d)(2)(i) -- (iii) have not been met, the department shall |
27 | begin an open application process for the operation of a compassion center. In granting a new |
28 | registration certificate, the department of health or the department of business regulation shall |
29 | consider factors listed in subdivision (c)(3); |
30 | (4) The department of health or the department of business regulation shall issue a |
31 | compassion center one or more thirty-day (30) temporary registration certificates after that |
32 | compassion center's registration would otherwise expire if the following conditions are all |
33 | satisfied: |
34 | (i) The compassion center previously applied for a renewal, but the department had not |
| LC000710 - Page 41 of 87 |
1 | yet come to a decision; |
2 | (ii) The compassion center requested a temporary registration certificate; and |
3 | (iii) The compassion center has not had its registration certificate revoked due to |
4 | violations of this chapter or regulations issued pursuant to this chapter. |
5 | (5) A compassion center's registry identification card shall be subject to revocation if the |
6 | compassion center: |
7 | (i) Possesses an amount of marijuana exceeding the limits established by this chapter; |
8 | (ii) Is in violation of the laws of this state; |
9 | (iii) Is in violation of other departmental regulations; or |
10 | (iv) Employs or enters into a business relationship with a medical practitioner who |
11 | provides written certification of a qualifying patient's medical condition. |
12 | (e) Inspection. Compassion centers are subject to reasonable inspection by the department |
13 | of health, division of facilities regulation and the department of business regulation. During an |
14 | inspection, the departments may review the compassion center's confidential records, including |
15 | its dispensing records, which shall track transactions according to qualifying patients' registry |
16 | identification numbers to protect their confidentiality. |
17 | (f) Compassion center requirements: |
18 | (1) A compassion center shall be operated on a not-for-profit basis for the mutual benefit |
19 | of its patients. A compassion center need not be recognized as a tax-exempt organization by the |
20 | Internal Revenue Service; |
21 | (2) A compassion center may not be located within one thousand feet (1,000') of the |
22 | property line of a preexisting public or private school; |
23 | (3) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center shall notify the department of |
24 | health within ten (10) days of when a principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or |
25 | employee ceases to work at the compassion center. On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion |
26 | center shall notify the department of business regulation within ten (10) days of when a principal |
27 | officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee ceases to work at the compassion center. |
28 | His or her card shall be deemed null and void and the person shall be liable for any penalties that |
29 | may apply to any nonmedical possession or use of marijuana by the person; |
30 | (4)(i) On or before December 31, 2016, a compassion center shall notify the department |
31 | of health in writing of the name, address, and date of birth of any new principal officer, board |
32 | member, agent, volunteer or employee and shall submit a fee in an amount established by the |
33 | department for a new registry identification card before that person begins his or her relationship |
34 | with the compassion center; |
| LC000710 - Page 42 of 87 |
1 | (ii) On or after January 1, 2017, a compassion center shall notify the department of |
2 | business regulation, in writing, of the name, address, and date of birth of any new principal |
3 | officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee and shall submit a fee in an amount |
4 | established by the department for a new registry identification card before that person begins his |
5 | or her relationship with the compassion center; |
6 | (5) A compassion center shall implement appropriate security measures to deter and |
7 | prevent the unauthorized entrance into areas containing marijuana and the theft of marijuana and |
8 | shall insure that each location has an operational security alarm system. Each compassion center |
9 | shall request that the department of public safety division of state police visit the compassion |
10 | center to inspect the security of the facility and make any recommendations regarding the security |
11 | of the facility and its personnel within ten (10) days prior to the initial opening of each |
12 | compassion center. Said recommendations shall not be binding upon any compassion center, nor |
13 | shall the lack of implementation of said recommendations delay or prevent the opening or |
14 | operation of any center. If the department of public safety division of state police does not inspect |
15 | the compassion center within the ten-day (10) period, there shall be no delay in the compassion |
16 | center's opening. |
17 | (6) The operating documents of a compassion center shall include procedures for the |
18 | oversight of the compassion center and procedures to ensure accurate record keeping. |
19 | (7) A compassion center is prohibited from acquiring, possessing, cultivating, |
20 | manufacturing, delivering, transferring, transporting, supplying, or dispensing marijuana for any |
21 | purpose except to assist registered qualifying patients with the medical use of marijuana directly |
22 | or through the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or authorized purchaser. |
23 | (8) All principal officers and board members of a compassion center must be residents of |
24 | the state of Rhode Island. |
25 | (9) Each time a new, registered, qualifying patient visits a compassion center, it shall |
26 | provide the patient with a frequently asked questions sheet, designed by the department, that |
27 | explains the limitations on the right to use medical marijuana under state law. |
28 | (10) Effective July 1, 2016, each compassion center shall be subject to any regulations |
29 | promulgated by the department of health that specify how usable marijuana must be tested for |
30 | items included but not limited to cannabinoid profile and contaminants. |
31 | (11) Effective January 1, 2017, each compassion center shall be subject to any product |
32 | labeling requirements promulgated by the department of business regulation. |
33 | (12) Each compassion center shall develop, implement, and maintain on the premises |
34 | employee, volunteer, and agent policies and procedures to address the following requirements: |
| LC000710 - Page 43 of 87 |
1 | (i) A job description or employment contract developed for all employees and agents, and |
2 | a volunteer agreement for all volunteers, that includes duties, authority, responsibilities, |
3 | qualifications, and supervision; and |
4 | (ii) Training in, and adherence to, state confidentiality laws. |
5 | (13) Each compassion center shall maintain a personnel record for each employee, agent, |
6 | and volunteer that includes an application and a record of any disciplinary action taken. |
7 | (14) Each compassion center shall develop, implement, and maintain on the premises an |
8 | on-site training curriculum, or enter into contractual relationships with outside resources capable |
9 | of meeting employee training needs, that includes, but is not limited to, the following topics: |
10 | (i) Professional conduct, ethics, and patient confidentiality; and |
11 | (ii) Informational developments in the field of medical use of marijuana. |
12 | (15) Each compassion center entity shall provide each employee, agent, and volunteer, at |
13 | the time of his or her initial appointment, training in the following: |
14 | (i) The proper use of security measures and controls that have been adopted; and |
15 | (ii) Specific procedural instructions on how to respond to an emergency, including |
16 | robbery or violent accident. |
17 | (16) All compassion centers shall prepare training documentation for each employee and |
18 | volunteer and have employees and volunteers sign a statement indicating the date, time, and place |
19 | the employee and volunteer received said training and topics discussed, to include name and title |
20 | of presenters. The compassion center shall maintain documentation of an employee's and a |
21 | volunteer's training for a period of at least six (6) months after termination of an employee's |
22 | employment or the volunteer's volunteering. |
23 | (g) Maximum amount of usable marijuana to be dispensed: |
24 | (1) A compassion center or principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or |
25 | employee of a compassion center may not dispense more than two and one half ounces (2.5 oz.) |
26 | of usable marijuana, or its equivalent, to a qualifying patient directly or through a qualifying |
27 | patient's primary caregiver or authorized purchaser during a fifteen-day (15) period; |
28 | (2) A compassion center or principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or |
29 | employee of a compassion center may not dispense an amount of usable marijuana, or its |
30 | equivalent, seedlings, or mature marijuana plants, to a qualifying patient, a qualifying patient's |
31 | primary caregiver, or a qualifying patient's authorized purchaser that the compassion center, |
32 | principal officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee knows would cause the recipient |
33 | to possess more marijuana than is permitted under the Edward O. Hawkins and Thomas C. Slater |
34 | Medical Marijuana Act. |
| LC000710 - Page 44 of 87 |
1 | (3) Compassion centers shall utilize a database administered by the departments of health |
2 | and business regulation. The database shall contain all compassion centers' transactions according |
3 | to qualifying patients', authorized purchasers', and primary caregivers' registry identification |
4 | numbers to protect the confidentiality of patient personal and medical information. Compassion |
5 | centers will not have access to any applications or supporting information submitted by |
6 | qualifying patients, authorized purchasers or primary caregivers. Before dispensing marijuana to |
7 | any patient or authorized purchaser, the compassion center must utilize the database to ensure that |
8 | a qualifying patient is not dispensed more than two and one half ounces (2.5 oz.) of usable |
9 | marijuana or its equivalent directly or through the qualifying patient's primary caregiver or |
10 | authorized purchaser during a fifteen-day (15) period. |
11 | (h) Immunity: |
12 | (1) No registered compassion center shall be subject to prosecution; search, except by the |
13 | departments pursuant to subsection (e); seizure; or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or |
14 | privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business, |
15 | occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for acting in accordance with this |
16 | section to assist registered qualifying patients. |
17 | (2) No registered compassion center shall be subject to prosecution, seizure, or penalty in |
18 | any manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or |
19 | disciplinary action, by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, for |
20 | selling, giving, or distributing marijuana in whatever form, and within the limits established by, |
21 | the department of health or the department of business regulation to another registered |
22 | compassion center. |
23 | (3) No principal officers, board members, agents, volunteers, or employees of a registered |
24 | compassion center shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, search, seizure, or penalty in any |
25 | manner, or denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary |
26 | action by a business, occupational, or professional licensing board or entity, solely for working |
27 | for or with a compassion center to engage in acts permitted by this section. |
28 | (4) No state employee shall be subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty in any manner, or |
29 | denied any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty, disciplinary action, |
30 | termination, or loss of employee or pension benefits, for any and all conduct that occurs within |
31 | the scope of his or her employment regarding the administration, execution and/or enforcement of |
32 | this act, and the provisions of §§ 9-31-8 and 9-31-9 shall be applicable to this section. |
33 | (i) Prohibitions: |
34 | (1) A compassion center must limit its inventory of seedlings, plants, and usable |
| LC000710 - Page 45 of 87 |
1 | marijuana to reflect the projected needs of qualifying patients; |
2 | (2) A compassion center may not dispense, deliver, or otherwise transfer marijuana to a |
3 | person other than a patient cardholder or to such patient's primary caregiver or authorized |
4 | purchaser; |
5 | (3) A person found to have violated paragraph (2) of this subsection may not be an |
6 | employee, agent, volunteer, principal officer, or board member of any compassion center; |
7 | (4) An employee, agent, volunteer, principal officer or board member of any compassion |
8 | center found in violation of paragraph (2) shall have his or her registry identification revoked |
9 | immediately; and |
10 | (5) No person who has been convicted of a felony drug offense or has entered a plea of |
11 | nolo contendere for a felony drug offense with a sentence of probation may be the principal |
12 | officer, board member, agent, volunteer, or employee of a compassion center unless the |
13 | department has determined that the person's conviction was for the medical use of marijuana or |
14 | assisting with the medical use of marijuana in accordance with the terms and conditions of this |
15 | chapter. A person who is employed by or is an agent, volunteer, principal officer, or board |
16 | member of a compassion center in violation of this section is guilty of a civil violation punishable |
17 | by a fine of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000). A subsequent violation of this section is a |
18 | misdemeanor. |
19 | (j) Legislative oversight committee: |
20 | (1) The general assembly shall appoint a nine-member (9) oversight committee |
21 | comprised of: one member of the house of representatives; one member of the senate; one |
22 | physician to be selected from a list provided by the Rhode Island medical society; one nurse to be |
23 | selected from a list provided by the Rhode Island state nurses association; two (2) registered |
24 | qualifying patients; one registered primary caregiver; one patient advocate to be selected from a |
25 | list provided by the Rhode Island patient advocacy coalition; and the superintendent of the |
26 | department of public safety, or his/her designee. |
27 | (2) The oversight committee shall meet at least six (6) times per year for the purpose of |
28 | evaluating and making recommendations to the general assembly regarding: |
29 | (i) Patients' access to medical marijuana; |
30 | (ii) Efficacy of compassion centers; |
31 | (iii) Physician participation in the Medical Marijuana Program; |
32 | (iv) The definition of qualifying medical condition; and |
33 | (v) Research studies regarding health effects of medical marijuana for patients. |
34 | (3) On or before January 1 of every even numbered year, the oversight committee shall |
| LC000710 - Page 46 of 87 |
1 | report to the general assembly on its findings. |
2 | SECTION 4. Chapter 31-22 of the General Laws entitled "Miscellaneous Rules" is |
3 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
4 | 31-22-32. Consuming marijuana in a moving vehicle. |
5 | (a) No person shall consume marijuana while driving a motor vehicle on any street or |
6 | highway within the state. |
7 | (b) No person shall smoke or vaporize marijuana while they are a passenger in a motor |
8 | vehicle that is being operated on any street or highway within the state. |
9 | (c) Any person found in violation of this section may be fined not more than two hundred |
10 | dollars ($200) or have their driver's license suspended for up to six (6) months, or both, for the |
11 | first violation, and for each subsequent violation may be fined not more than five hundred dollars |
12 | ($500) or have their driver's license suspended for up to one year, or both. |
13 | (d) The original jurisdiction of this section shall be exclusively in the traffic tribunal. |
14 | SECTION 5. Sections 31-27-2 and 31-27-2.4 of the General Laws in Chapter 31-27 |
15 | entitled "Motor Vehicle Offenses" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
16 | 31-27-2. Driving under influence of liquor or drugs. |
17 | (a) Whoever drives or otherwise operates any vehicle in the state while under the |
18 | influence of any intoxicating liquor, drugs, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in |
19 | chapter 28 of title 21, or any combination of these, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, except as |
20 | provided in subsection (d)(3), and shall be punished as provided in subsection (d). |
21 | (b)(1) Any person charged under subsection (a), whose blood alcohol concentration is |
22 | eight one-hundredths of one percent (.08%) or more by weight, as shown by a chemical analysis |
23 | of a blood, breath, or urine sample, shall be guilty of violating subsection (a). This provision shall |
24 | not preclude a conviction based on other admissible evidence. Proof of guilt under this section |
25 | may also be based on evidence that the person charged was under the influence of intoxicating |
26 | liquor, drugs, toluene, or any controlled substance defined in chapter 28 of title 21, or any |
27 | combination of these, to a degree that rendered the person incapable of safely operating a vehicle. |
28 | The fact that any person charged with violating this section is, or has been, legally entitled to use |
29 | alcohol or a drug shall not constitute a defense against any charge of violating this section. A |
30 | person twenty-one (21) years of age or older or a person exempt from criminal penalties for the |
31 | medical use of marijuana pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21 shall not be considered under the |
32 | influence of marijuana solely because of the presence of marijuana metabolites or components of |
33 | marijuana. |
34 | (2) Except as provided in this subsection, Whoever whoever drives, or otherwise |
| LC000710 - Page 47 of 87 |
1 | operates, any vehicle in the state with a blood presence of any scheduled controlled substance as |
2 | defined within chapter 28 of title 21, as shown by analysis of a blood or urine sample, shall be |
3 | guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished as provided in subsection (d). |
4 | (c) In any criminal prosecution for a violation of subsection (a), evidence as to the |
5 | amount of intoxicating liquor, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in chapter 28 of |
6 | title 21, or any combination of these, in the defendant's blood at the time alleged as shown by a |
7 | chemical analysis of the defendant's breath, blood, or urine or other bodily substance, shall be |
8 | admissible and competent, provided that evidence is presented that the following conditions have |
9 | been complied with: |
10 | (1) The defendant has consented to the taking of the test upon which the analysis is made. |
11 | Evidence that the defendant had refused to submit to the test shall not be admissible unless the |
12 | defendant elects to testify. |
13 | (2) A true copy of the report of the test result was mailed within seventy-two (72) hours |
14 | of the taking of the test to the person submitting to a breath test. |
15 | (3) Any person submitting to a chemical test of blood, urine, or other body fluids shall |
16 | have a true copy of the report of the test result mailed to him or her within thirty (30) days |
17 | following the taking of the test. |
18 | (4) The test was performed according to methods and with equipment approved by the |
19 | director of the department of health of the state of Rhode Island and by an authorized individual. |
20 | (5) Equipment used for the conduct of the tests by means of breath analysis had been |
21 | tested for accuracy within thirty (30) days preceding the test by personnel qualified as |
22 | hereinbefore provided, and breathalyzer operators shall be qualified and certified by the |
23 | department of health within three hundred sixty-five (365) days of the test. |
24 | (6) The person arrested and charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the |
25 | influence of intoxicating liquor, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in chapter 28 of |
26 | title 21 or any combination of these in violation of subsection (a), was afforded the opportunity to |
27 | have an additional chemical test. The officer arresting or so charging the person shall have |
28 | informed the person of this right and afforded him or her a reasonable opportunity to exercise this |
29 | right, and a notation to this effect is made in the official records of the case in the police |
30 | department. Refusal to permit an additional chemical test shall render incompetent and |
31 | inadmissible in evidence the original report. |
32 | (d)(1)(i) Every person found to have violated subsection (b)(1) shall be sentenced as |
33 | follows: for a first violation whose blood alcohol concentration is eight one-hundredths of one |
34 | percent (.08%), but less than one-tenth of one percent (.1%), by weight, or who has a blood |
| LC000710 - Page 48 of 87 |
1 | presence of any scheduled controlled substance as defined in subsection (b)(2), shall be subject to |
2 | a fine of not less than one hundred dollars ($100), nor more than three hundred dollars ($300); |
3 | shall be required to perform ten (10) to sixty (60) hours of public community restitution, and/or |
4 | shall be imprisoned for up to one year. The sentence may be served in any unit of the adult |
5 | correctional institutions in the discretion of the sentencing judge and/or shall be required to attend |
6 | a special course on driving while intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance; |
7 | provided, however, that the court may permit a servicemember or veteran to complete any court- |
8 | approved counseling program administered or approved by the Veterans' Administration, and his |
9 | or her driver's license shall be suspended for thirty (30) days up to one hundred eighty (180) days. |
10 | The sentencing judge or magistrate may prohibit that person from operating a motor vehicle that |
11 | is not equipped with an ignition interlock system as provided in § 31-27-2.8. |
12 | (ii) Every person convicted of a first violation whose blood alcohol concentration is one- |
13 | tenth of one percent (.1%) by weight or above, but less than fifteen hundredths of one percent |
14 | (.15%), or whose blood alcohol concentration is unknown, shall be subject to a fine of not less |
15 | than one hundred ($100) dollars, nor more than four hundred dollars ($400), and shall be required |
16 | to perform ten (10) to sixty (60) hours of public community restitution and/or shall be imprisoned |
17 | for up to one year. The sentence may be served in any unit of the adult correctional institutions in |
18 | the discretion of the sentencing judge. The person's driving license shall be suspended for a |
19 | period of three (3) months to twelve (12) months. The sentencing judge shall require attendance |
20 | at a special course on driving while intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance |
21 | and/or alcoholic or drug treatment for the individual; provided, however, that the court may |
22 | permit a servicemember or veteran to complete any court-approved counseling program |
23 | administered or approved by the Veterans' Administration. The sentencing judge or magistrate |
24 | may prohibit that person from operating a motor vehicle that is not equipped with an ignition |
25 | interlock system as provided in § 31-27-2.8. |
26 | (iii) Every person convicted of a first offense whose blood alcohol concentration is |
27 | fifteen hundredths of one percent (.15%) or above, or who is under the influence of a drug, |
28 | toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in subsection (b)(1), shall be subject to a fine of |
29 | five hundred dollars ($500) and shall be required to perform twenty (20) to sixty (60) hours of |
30 | public community restitution and/or shall be imprisoned for up to one year. The sentence may be |
31 | served in any unit of the adult correctional institutions in the discretion of the sentencing judge. |
32 | The person's driving license shall be suspended for a period of three (3) months to eighteen (18) |
33 | months. The sentencing judge shall require attendance at a special course on driving while |
34 | intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance and/or alcohol or drug treatment for |
| LC000710 - Page 49 of 87 |
1 | the individual; provided, however, that the court may permit a servicemember or veteran to |
2 | complete any court-approved counseling program administered or approved by the Veterans' |
3 | Administration. The sentencing judge or magistrate shall prohibit that person from operating a |
4 | motor vehicle that is not equipped with an ignition interlock system as provided in § 31-27-2.8. |
5 | (2)(i) Every person convicted of a second violation within a five-year (5) period with a |
6 | blood alcohol concentration of eight one-hundredths of one percent (.08%) or above, but less than |
7 | fifteen hundredths of one percent (.15%), or whose blood alcohol concentration is unknown, or |
8 | who has a blood presence of any controlled substance as defined in subsection (b)(2), and every |
9 | person convicted of a second violation within a five-year (5) period, regardless of whether the |
10 | prior violation and subsequent conviction was a violation and subsequent conviction under this |
11 | statute or under the driving under the influence of liquor or drugs statute of any other state, shall |
12 | be subject to a mandatory fine of four hundred dollars ($400). The person's driving license shall |
13 | be suspended for a period of one year to two (2) years, and the individual shall be sentenced to |
14 | not less than ten (10) days, nor more than one year, in jail. The sentence may be served in any |
15 | unit of the adult correctional institutions in the discretion of the sentencing judge; however, not |
16 | less than forty-eight (48) hours of imprisonment shall be served consecutively. The sentencing |
17 | judge shall require alcohol or drug treatment for the individual; provided, however, that the court |
18 | may permit a servicemember or veteran to complete any court-approved counseling program |
19 | administered or approved by the Veterans' Administration and shall prohibit that person from |
20 | operating a motor vehicle that is not equipped with an ignition interlock system as provided in § |
21 | 31-27-2.8. |
22 | (ii) Every person convicted of a second violation within a five-year (5) period whose |
23 | blood alcohol concentration is fifteen hundredths of one percent (.15%) or above, by weight as |
24 | shown by a chemical analysis of a blood, breath, or urine sample, or who is under the influence of |
25 | a drug, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in subsection (b)(1), shall be subject to |
26 | mandatory imprisonment of not less than six (6) months, nor more than one year; a mandatory |
27 | fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000); and a mandatory license suspension for a |
28 | period of two (2) years from the date of completion of the sentence imposed under this |
29 | subsection. The sentencing judge shall require alcohol or drug treatment for the individual; |
30 | provided, however, that the court may permit a servicemember or veteran to complete any court |
31 | approved counseling program administered or approved by the Veterans' Administration. The |
32 | sentencing judge or magistrate shall prohibit that person from operating a motor vehicle that is |
33 | not equipped with an ignition interlock system as provided in § 31-27-2.8 |
34 | (3)(i) Every person convicted of a third or subsequent violation within a five-year (5) |
| LC000710 - Page 50 of 87 |
1 | period with a blood alcohol concentration of eight one-hundredths of one percent (.08%) or |
2 | above, but less than fifteen hundredths of one percent (.15%), or whose blood alcohol |
3 | concentration is unknown or who has a blood presence of any scheduled controlled substance as |
4 | defined in subsection (b)(2), regardless of whether any prior violation and subsequent conviction |
5 | was a violation and subsequent conviction under this statute or under the driving under the |
6 | influence of liquor or drugs statute of any other state, shall be guilty of a felony and be subject to |
7 | a mandatory fine of four hundred ($400) dollars. The person's driving license shall be suspended |
8 | for a period of two (2) years to three (3) years, and the individual shall be sentenced to not less |
9 | than one year and not more than three (3) years in jail. The sentence may be served in any unit of |
10 | the adult correctional institutions in the discretion of the sentencing judge; however, not less than |
11 | forty-eight (48) hours of imprisonment shall be served consecutively. The sentencing judge shall |
12 | require alcohol or drug treatment for the individual; provided, however, that the court may permit |
13 | a servicemember or veteran to complete any court-approved counseling program administered or |
14 | approved by the Veterans' Administration, and shall prohibit that person from operating a motor |
15 | vehicle that is not equipped with an ignition interlock system as provided in § 31-27-2.8. |
16 | (ii) Every person convicted of a third or subsequent violation within a five-year (5) period |
17 | whose blood alcohol concentration is fifteen hundredths of one percent (.15%) above by weight |
18 | as shown by a chemical analysis of a blood, breath, or urine sample, or who is under the influence |
19 | of a drug, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in subsection (b)(1), shall be subject to |
20 | mandatory imprisonment of not less than three (3) years, nor more than five (5) years; a |
21 | mandatory fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000), nor more than five thousand |
22 | dollars ($5,000); and a mandatory license suspension for a period of three (3) years from the date |
23 | of completion of the sentence imposed under this subsection. The sentencing judge shall require |
24 | alcohol or drug treatment for the individual. The sentencing judge or magistrate shall prohibit that |
25 | person from operating a motor vehicle that is not equipped with an ignition interlock system as |
26 | provided in § 31-27-2.8. |
27 | (iii) In addition to the foregoing penalties, every person convicted of a third or |
28 | subsequent violation within a five-year (5) period, regardless of whether any prior violation and |
29 | subsequent conviction was a violation and subsequent conviction under this statute or under the |
30 | driving under the influence of liquor or drugs statute of any other state, shall be subject, in the |
31 | discretion of the sentencing judge, to having the vehicle owned and operated by the violator |
32 | seized and sold by the state of Rhode Island, with all funds obtained by the sale to be transferred |
33 | to the general fund. |
34 | (4) Whoever drives or otherwise operates any vehicle in the state while under the |
| LC000710 - Page 51 of 87 |
1 | influence of any intoxicating liquor, drugs, toluene, or any controlled substance as defined in |
2 | chapter 28 of title 21, or any combination of these, when his or her license to operate is |
3 | suspended, revoked, or cancelled for operating under the influence of a narcotic drug or |
4 | intoxicating liquor, shall be guilty of a felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than three |
5 | (3) years and by a fine of not more than three thousand dollars ($3,000). The court shall require |
6 | alcohol and/or drug treatment for the individual; provided, the penalties provided for in this |
7 | subsection (d)(4) shall not apply to an individual who has surrendered his or her license and |
8 | served the court-ordered period of suspension, but who, for any reason, has not had his or her |
9 | license reinstated after the period of suspension, revocation, or suspension has expired; provided, |
10 | further, the individual shall be subject to the provisions of subdivision (d)(2)(i), (d)(2)(ii), |
11 | (d)(3)(i), (d)(3)(ii), or (d)(3)(iii) regarding subsequent offenses, and any other applicable |
12 | provision of this section. |
13 | (5)(i) For purposes of determining the period of license suspension, a prior violation shall |
14 | constitute any charge brought and sustained under the provisions of this section or § 31-27-2.1. |
15 | (ii) Any person over the age of eighteen (18) who is convicted under this section for |
16 | operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, other drugs, or a combination of |
17 | these, while a child under the age of thirteen (13) years was present as a passenger in the motor |
18 | vehicle when the offense was committed shall be subject to immediate license suspension |
19 | pending prosecution. Any person convicted of violating this section shall be guilty of a |
20 | misdemeanor for a first offense and may be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not more than |
21 | one year and a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Any person convicted of a |
22 | second or subsequent offense shall be guilty of a felony offense and may be sentenced to a term |
23 | of imprisonment of not more than five (5) years and a fine not to exceed five thousand dollars |
24 | ($5,000). The sentencing judge shall also order a license suspension of up to two (2) years, |
25 | require attendance at a special course on driving while intoxicated or under the influence of a |
26 | controlled substance, and alcohol or drug education and/or treatment. The individual may also be |
27 | required to pay a highway assessment fee of no more than five hundred dollars ($500) and the |
28 | assessment shall be deposited in the general fund. |
29 | (6)(i) Any person convicted of a violation under this section shall pay a highway |
30 | assessment fine of five hundred dollars ($500) that shall be deposited into the general fund. The |
31 | assessment provided for by this subsection shall be collected from a violator before any other |
32 | fines authorized by this section. |
33 | (ii) Any person convicted of a violation under this section shall be assessed a fee of |
34 | eighty-six dollars ($86). |
| LC000710 - Page 52 of 87 |
1 | (7)(i) If the person convicted of violating this section is under the age of eighteen (18) |
2 | years, for the first violation he or she shall be required to perform ten (10) to sixty (60) hours of |
3 | public community restitution and the juvenile's driving license shall be suspended for a period of |
4 | six (6) months, and may be suspended for a period up to eighteen (18) months. The sentencing |
5 | judge shall also require attendance at a special course on driving while intoxicated or under the |
6 | influence of a controlled substance and alcohol or drug education and/or treatment for the |
7 | juvenile. The juvenile may also be required to pay a highway assessment fine of no more than |
8 | five hundred dollars ($500) and the assessment imposed shall be deposited into the general fund. |
9 | (ii) If the person convicted of violating this section is under the age of eighteen (18) |
10 | years, for a second or subsequent violation regardless of whether any prior violation and |
11 | subsequent conviction was a violation and subsequent under this statute or under the driving |
12 | under the influence of liquor or drugs statute of any other state, he or she shall be subject to a |
13 | mandatory suspension of his or her driving license until such time as he or she is twenty-one (21) |
14 | years of age and may, in the discretion of the sentencing judge, also be sentenced to the Rhode |
15 | Island training school for a period of not more than one year and/or a fine of not more than five |
16 | hundred dollars ($500). |
17 | (8) Any person convicted of a violation under this section may undergo a clinical |
18 | assessment at the community college of Rhode Island's center for workforce and community |
19 | education. Should this clinical assessment determine problems of alcohol, drug abuse, or |
20 | psychological problems associated with alcoholic or drug abuse, this person shall be referred to |
21 | an appropriate facility, licensed or approved by the department of behavioral healthcare, |
22 | developmental disabilities and hospitals, for treatment placement, case management, and |
23 | monitoring. In the case of a servicemember or veteran, the court may order that the person be |
24 | evaluated through the Veterans' Administration. Should the clinical assessment determine |
25 | problems of alcohol, drug abuse, or psychological problems associated with alcohol or drug |
26 | abuse, the person may have their treatment, case management, and monitoring administered or |
27 | approved by the Veterans' Administration. |
28 | (e) Percent by weight of alcohol in the blood shall be based upon milligrams of alcohol |
29 | per one hundred (100) cubic centimeters of blood. |
30 | (f)(1) There is established an alcohol and drug safety unit within the division of motor |
31 | vehicles to administer an alcohol safety action program. The program shall provide for placement |
32 | and follow-up for persons who are required to pay the highway safety assessment. The alcohol |
33 | and drug safety action program will be administered in conjunction with alcohol and drug |
34 | programs licensed by the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and |
| LC000710 - Page 53 of 87 |
1 | hospitals. |
2 | (2) Persons convicted under the provisions of this chapter shall be required to attend a |
3 | special course on driving while intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance, |
4 | and/or participate in an alcohol or drug treatment program; provided, however, that the court may |
5 | permit a servicemember or veteran to complete any court-approved counseling program |
6 | administered or approved by the Veterans' Administration. The course shall take into |
7 | consideration any language barrier that may exist as to any person ordered to attend, and shall |
8 | provide for instruction reasonably calculated to communicate the purposes of the course in |
9 | accordance with the requirements of the subsection. Any costs reasonably incurred in connection |
10 | with the provision of this accommodation shall be borne by the person being retrained. A copy of |
11 | any violation under this section shall be forwarded by the court to the alcohol and drug safety |
12 | unit. In the event that persons convicted under the provisions of this chapter fail to attend and |
13 | complete the above course or treatment program, as ordered by the judge, then the person may be |
14 | brought before the court, and after a hearing as to why the order of the court was not followed, |
15 | may be sentenced to jail for a period not exceeding one year. |
16 | (3) The alcohol and drug safety action program within the division of motor vehicles |
17 | shall be funded by general revenue appropriations. |
18 | (g) The director of the health department of the state of Rhode Island is empowered to |
19 | make and file with the secretary of state regulations that prescribe the techniques and methods of |
20 | chemical analysis of the person's body fluids or breath and the qualifications and certification of |
21 | individuals authorized to administer this testing and analysis. |
22 | (h) Jurisdiction for misdemeanor violations of this section shall be with the district court |
23 | for persons eighteen (18) years of age or older and to the family court for persons under the age |
24 | of eighteen (18) years. The courts shall have full authority to impose any sentence authorized and |
25 | to order the suspension of any license for violations of this section. All trials in the district court |
26 | and family court of violations of the section shall be scheduled within thirty (30) days of the |
27 | arraignment date. No continuance or postponement shall be granted except for good cause shown. |
28 | Any continuances that are necessary shall be granted for the shortest practicable time. Trials in |
29 | superior court are not required to be scheduled within thirty (30) days of the arraignment date. |
30 | (i) No fines, suspensions, assessments, alcohol or drug treatment programs, course on |
31 | driving while intoxicated or under the influence of a controlled substance, public community |
32 | restitution, or jail provided for under this section can be suspended. |
33 | (j) An order to attend a special course on driving while intoxicated that shall be |
34 | administered in cooperation with a college or university accredited by the state, shall include a |
| LC000710 - Page 54 of 87 |
1 | provision to pay a reasonable tuition for the course in an amount not less than twenty-five dollars |
2 | ($25.00), and a fee of one hundred seventy-five dollars ($175), which fee shall be deposited into |
3 | the general fund. |
4 | (k) For the purposes of this section, any test of a sample of blood, breath, or urine for the |
5 | presence of alcohol that relies in whole or in part upon the principle of infrared light absorption is |
6 | considered a chemical test. |
7 | (l) If any provision of this section, or the application of any provision, shall for any |
8 | reason be judged invalid, such a judgment shall not affect, impair, or invalidate the remainder of |
9 | the section, but shall be confined in this effect to the provision or application directly involved in |
10 | the controversy giving rise to the judgment. |
11 | (m) For the purposes of this section, "servicemember" means a person who is presently |
12 | serving in the armed forces of the United States, including the Coast Guard, a reserve component |
13 | thereof, or the National Guard. "Veteran" means a person who has served in the armed forces, |
14 | including the Coast Guard of the United States, a reserve component thereof, or the National |
15 | Guard, and has been discharged under other than dishonorable conditions. |
16 | 31-27-2.4. Driving while in possession of controlled substances. |
17 | (a) In addition to any other penalty prescribed by law, whoever operates any motor |
18 | vehicle while knowingly having in the motor vehicle or in his or her possession, a controlled |
19 | substance, as defined in § 21-28-1.02, except for possession of up to one ounce (1 oz.) of |
20 | marijuana, shall have his or her license suspended for a period of six (6) months. |
21 | (b) This section shall not apply to any person who lawfully possesses a controlled |
22 | substance, as defined in § 21-28-1.02, as a direct result and pursuant to a valid prescription from a |
23 | licensed medical practitioner, or as otherwise authorized by chapter 28 of title 21. |
24 | (c) This section shall not apply to any person who possesses marijuana as allowed by |
25 | chapters 28.6 or 28.11 of title 21. |
26 | SECTION 6. Section 44-11-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-11 entitled "Business |
27 | Corporation Tax" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
28 | 44-11-11. "Net income" defined. |
29 | (a)(1) "Net income" means, for any taxable year and for any corporate taxpayer, the |
30 | taxable income of the taxpayer for that taxable year under the laws of the United States, plus: |
31 | (i) Any interest not included in the taxable income; |
32 | (ii) Any specific exemptions; |
33 | (iii) The tax imposed by this chapter; and minus |
34 | (iv) Interest on obligations of the United States or its possessions, and other interest |
| LC000710 - Page 55 of 87 |
1 | exempt from taxation by this state; and |
2 | (v) The federal net operating loss deduction. |
3 | (2) All binding federal elections made by or on behalf of the taxpayer applicable either |
4 | directly or indirectly to the determination of taxable income shall be binding on the taxpayer |
5 | except where this chapter or its attendant regulations specifically modify or provide otherwise. |
6 | Rhode Island taxable income shall not include the "gross-up of dividends" required by the federal |
7 | Internal Revenue Code to be taken into taxable income in connection with the taxpayer's election |
8 | of the foreign tax credit. |
9 | (b) A net operating loss deduction shall be allowed which shall be the same as the net |
10 | operating loss deduction allowed under 26 U.S.C. § 172, except that: |
11 | (1) Any net operating loss included in determining the deduction shall be adjusted to |
12 | reflect the inclusions and exclusions from entire net income required by subsection (a) of this |
13 | section and § 44-11-11.1; |
14 | (2) The deduction shall not include any net operating loss sustained during any taxable |
15 | year in which the taxpayer was not subject to the tax imposed by this chapter; and |
16 | (3) The deduction shall not exceed the deduction for the taxable year allowable under 26 |
17 | U.S.C. § 172; provided, that the deduction for a taxable year may not be carried back to any other |
18 | taxable year for Rhode Island purposes but shall only be allowable on a carry forward basis for |
19 | the five (5) succeeding taxable years. |
20 | (c) "Domestic international sales corporations" (referred to as DISCs), for the purposes of |
21 | this chapter, will be treated as they are under federal income tax law and shall not pay the amount |
22 | of the tax computed under § 44-11-2(a). Any income to shareholders of DISCs is to be treated in |
23 | the same manner as it is treated under federal income tax law as it exists on December 31, 1984. |
24 | (d) A corporation which qualifies as a "foreign sales corporation" (FSC) under the |
25 | provisions of subchapter N, 26 U.S.C. § 861 et seq., and which has in effect for the entire taxable |
26 | year a valid election under federal law to be treated as a FSC, shall not pay the amount of the tax |
27 | computed under § 44-11-2(a). Any income to shareholders of FSCs is to be treated in the same |
28 | manner as it is treated under federal income tax law as it exists on January 1, 1985. |
29 | (e) Notwithstanding any federal tax law to the contrary, in computing net income for |
30 | businesses exempted from criminal penalties under §§ 21-28.6-12 or 21-28.10-4, there shall be |
31 | allowed as a deduction from state taxes all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred |
32 | during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including, but not limited to, |
33 | reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered. |
34 | SECTION 7. Sections 44-18-7, 44-18-7.1 and 44-18-30 of the General Laws in Chapter |
| LC000710 - Page 56 of 87 |
1 | 44-18 entitled "Sales and Use Taxes - Liability and Computation" are hereby amended to read as |
2 | follows: |
3 | 44-18-7. Sales defined. |
4 | "Sales" means and includes: |
5 | (1) Any transfer of title or possession, exchange, barter, lease, or rental, conditional or |
6 | otherwise, in any manner or by any means of tangible personal property for a consideration. |
7 | "Transfer of possession", "lease", or "rental" includes transactions found by the tax administrator |
8 | to be in lieu of a transfer of title, exchange, or barter. |
9 | (2) The producing, fabricating, processing, printing, or imprinting of tangible personal |
10 | property for a consideration for consumers who furnish either directly or indirectly the materials |
11 | used in the producing, fabricating, processing, printing, or imprinting. |
12 | (3) The furnishing and distributing of tangible personal property for a consideration by |
13 | social, athletic, and similar clubs and fraternal organizations to their members or others. |
14 | (4) The furnishing, preparing, or serving for consideration of food, meals, or drinks, |
15 | including any cover, minimum, entertainment, or other charge in connection therewith. |
16 | (5) A transaction whereby the possession of tangible personal property is transferred, but |
17 | the seller retains the title as security for the payment of the price. |
18 | (6) Any withdrawal, except a withdrawal pursuant to a transaction in foreign or interstate |
19 | commerce, of tangible personal property from the place where it is located for delivery to a point |
20 | in this state for the purpose of the transfer of title or possession, exchange, barter, lease, or rental, |
21 | conditional or otherwise, in any manner or by any means whatsoever, of the property for a |
22 | consideration. |
23 | (7) A transfer for a consideration of the title or possession of tangible personal property, |
24 | which has been produced, fabricated, or printed to the special order of the customer, or any |
25 | publication. |
26 | (8) The furnishing and distributing of electricity, natural gas, artificial gas, steam, |
27 | refrigeration, and water. |
28 | (9)(i) The furnishing for consideration of intrastate, interstate, and international |
29 | telecommunications service sourced in this state in accordance with §§ 44-18.1-15 and 44-18.1- |
30 | 16 and all ancillary services, and any maintenance services of telecommunication equipment |
31 | other than as provided for in § 44-18-12(b)(ii). For the purposes of chapters 18 and 19 of this title |
32 | only, telecommunication service does not include service rendered using a prepaid telephone |
33 | calling arrangement. |
34 | (ii) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (i) of this subdivision, in accordance |
| LC000710 - Page 57 of 87 |
1 | with the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act (4 U.S.C. §§ 116 -- 126), subject to the |
2 | specific exemptions described in 4 U.S.C. § 116(c), and the exemptions provided in §§ 44-18-8 |
3 | and 44-18-12, mobile telecommunications services that are deemed to be provided by the |
4 | customer's home service provider are subject to tax under this chapter if the customer's place of |
5 | primary use is in this state regardless of where the mobile telecommunications services originate, |
6 | terminate, or pass through. Mobile telecommunications services provided to a customer, the |
7 | charges for which are billed by or for the customer's home service provider, shall be deemed to be |
8 | provided by the customer's home service provider. |
9 | (10) The furnishing of service for transmission of messages by telegraph, cable, or radio |
10 | and the furnishing of community antenna television, subscription television, and cable television |
11 | services. |
12 | (11) The rental of living quarters in any hotel, rooming house, or tourist camp. |
13 | (12) The transfer for consideration of prepaid telephone calling arrangements and the |
14 | recharge of prepaid telephone calling arrangements sourced to this state in accordance with §§ |
15 | 44-18.1-11 and 44-18.1-15. "Prepaid telephone calling arrangement" means and includes prepaid |
16 | calling service and prepaid wireless calling service. |
17 | (13) The sale, storage, use, or other consumption of over-the-counter drugs as defined in |
18 | § 44-18-7.1(h)(ii). |
19 | (14) The sale, storage, use, or other consumption of prewritten computer software |
20 | delivered electronically or by load and leave as defined in § 44-18-7.1(g)(v). |
21 | (15) The sale, storage, use, or other consumption of vendor-hosted prewritten computer |
22 | software as defined in § 44-18-7.1(g)(vii). |
23 | (16) The sale, storage, use, or other consumption of medical marijuana as defined in § 21- |
24 | 28.6-3. |
25 | (17) The furnishing of services in this state as defined in § 44-18-7.3. |
26 | 44-18-7.1. Additional definitions. |
27 | (a) "Agreement" means the streamlined sales and use tax agreement. |
28 | (b) "Alcoholic beverages" means beverages that are suitable for human consumption and |
29 | contain one-half of one percent (.5%) or more of alcohol by volume. |
30 | (c) "Bundled transaction" is the retail sale of two or more products, except real property |
31 | and services to real property, where (1) The products are otherwise distinct and identifiable, and |
32 | (2) The products are sold for one non-itemized price. A "bundled transaction" does not include |
33 | the sale of any products in which the "sales price" varies, or is negotiable, based on the selection |
34 | by the purchaser of the products included in the transaction. |
| LC000710 - Page 58 of 87 |
1 | (i) "Distinct and identifiable products" does not include: |
2 | (A) Packaging -- such as containers, boxes, sacks, bags, and bottles -- or other materials - |
3 | - such as wrapping, labels, tags, and instruction guides -- that accompany the "retail sale" of the |
4 | products and are incidental or immaterial to the "retail sale" thereof. Examples of packaging that |
5 | are incidental or immaterial include grocery sacks, shoeboxes, dry cleaning garment bags, and |
6 | express delivery envelopes and boxes. |
7 | (B) A product provided free of charge with the required purchase of another product. A |
8 | product is "provided free of charge" if the "sales price" of the product purchased does not vary |
9 | depending on the inclusion of the products "provided free of charge." |
10 | (C) Items included in the member state's definition of "sales price," pursuant to appendix |
11 | C of the agreement. |
12 | (ii) The term "one non-itemized price" does not include a price that is separately |
13 | identified by product on binding sales or other supporting sales-related documentation made |
14 | available to the customer in paper or electronic form including, but not limited to, an invoice, bill |
15 | of sale, receipt, contract, service agreement, lease agreement, periodic notice of rates and |
16 | services, rate card, or price list. |
17 | (iii) A transaction that otherwise meets the definition of a "bundled transaction" as |
18 | defined above, is not a "bundled transaction" if it is: |
19 | (A) The "retail sale" of tangible personal property and a service where the tangible |
20 | personal property is essential to the use of the service, and is provided exclusively in connection |
21 | with the service, and the true object of the transaction is the service; or |
22 | (B) The "retail sale" of services where one service is provided that is essential to the use |
23 | or receipt of a second service and the first service is provided exclusively in connection with the |
24 | second service and the true object of the transaction is the second service; or |
25 | (C) A transaction that includes taxable products and nontaxable products and the |
26 | "purchase price" or "sales price" of the taxable products is de minimis. |
27 | 1. De minimis means the seller's "purchase price" or "sales price" of the taxable products |
28 | is ten percent (10%) or less of the total "purchase price" or "sales price" of the bundled products. |
29 | 2. Sellers shall use either the "purchase price" or the "sales price" of the products to |
30 | determine if the taxable products are de minimis. Sellers may not use a combination of the |
31 | "purchase price" and "sales price" of the products to determine if the taxable products are de |
32 | minimis. |
33 | 3. Sellers shall use the full term of a service contract to determine if the taxable products |
34 | are de minimis; or |
| LC000710 - Page 59 of 87 |
1 | (D) The "retail sale" of exempt tangible personal property and taxable tangible personal |
2 | property where: |
3 | 1. The transaction includes "food and food ingredients", "drugs", "durable medical |
4 | equipment", "mobility enhancing equipment", "over-the-counter drugs", "prosthetic devices" (all |
5 | as defined in this section) or medical supplies; and |
6 | 2. Where the seller's "purchase price" or "sales price" of the taxable tangible personal |
7 | property is fifty percent (50%) or less of the total "purchase price" or "sales price" of the bundled |
8 | tangible personal property. Sellers may not use a combination of the "purchase price" and "sales |
9 | price" of the tangible personal property when making the fifty percent (50%) determination for a |
10 | transaction. |
11 | (d) "Certified automated system (CAS)" means software certified under the agreement to |
12 | calculate the tax imposed by each jurisdiction on a transaction, determine the amount of tax to |
13 | remit to the appropriate state, and maintain a record of the transaction. |
14 | (e) "Certified service provider (CSP)" means an agent certified under the agreement to |
15 | perform all the seller's sales and use tax functions, other than the seller's obligation to remit tax on |
16 | its own purchases. |
17 | (f) Clothing and related items. |
18 | (i) "Clothing" means all human wearing apparel suitable for general use. |
19 | (ii) "Clothing accessories or equipment" means incidental items worn on the person or in |
20 | conjunction with "clothing." "Clothing accessories or equipment" does not include "clothing", |
21 | "sport or recreational equipment", or "protective equipment." |
22 | (iii) "Protective equipment" means items for human wear and designed as protection of |
23 | the wearer against injury or disease or as protections against damage or injury of other persons or |
24 | property but not suitable for general use. "Protective equipment" does not include "clothing", |
25 | "clothing accessories or equipment", and "sport or recreational equipment." |
26 | (iv) "Sport or recreational equipment" means items designed for human use and worn in |
27 | conjunction with an athletic or recreational activity that are not suitable for general use. "Sport or |
28 | recreational equipment" does not include "clothing", "clothing accessories or equipment", and |
29 | "protective equipment." |
30 | (g) Computer and related items. |
31 | (i) "Computer" means an electronic device that accepts information in digital or similar |
32 | form and manipulates it for a result based on a sequence of instructions. |
33 | (ii) "Computer software" means a set of coded instructions designed to cause a |
34 | "computer" or automatic data processing equipment to perform a task. |
| LC000710 - Page 60 of 87 |
1 | (iii) "Delivered electronically" means delivered to the purchaser by means other than |
2 | tangible storage media. |
3 | (iv) "Electronic" means relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, |
4 | wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities. |
5 | (v) "Load and leave" means delivery to the purchaser by use of a tangible storage media |
6 | where the tangible storage media is not physically transferred to the purchaser. |
7 | (vi) "Prewritten computer software" means "computer software," including prewritten |
8 | upgrades, that is not designed and developed by the author or other creator to the specifications of |
9 | a specific purchaser. The combining of two (2) or more "prewritten computer software" |
10 | programs or prewritten portions thereof does not cause the combination to be other than |
11 | "prewritten computer software." "Prewritten computer software" includes software designed and |
12 | developed by the author or other creator to the specifications of a specific purchaser when it is |
13 | sold to a person other than the specific purchaser. Where a person modifies or enhances |
14 | "computer software" of which the person is not the author or creator, the person shall be deemed |
15 | to be the author or creator only of such person's modifications or enhancements. "Prewritten |
16 | computer software" or a prewritten portion thereof that is modified or enhanced to any degree, |
17 | where such modification or enhancement is designed and developed to the specifications of a |
18 | specific purchaser, remains "prewritten computer software"; provided, however, that where there |
19 | is a reasonable, separately stated charge or an invoice or other statement of the price given to the |
20 | purchaser for such modification or enhancement, such modification or enhancement shall not |
21 | constitute "prewritten computer software." |
22 | (vii) "Vendor-hosted prewritten computer software" means prewritten computer software |
23 | that is accessed through the internet and/or a vendor-hosted server regardless of whether the |
24 | access is permanent or temporary and regardless of whether any downloading occurs. |
25 | (h) Drugs and related items. |
26 | (i) "Drug" means a compound, substance, or preparation, and any component of a |
27 | compound, substance, or preparation, other than "food and food ingredients," "dietary |
28 | supplements" or "alcoholic beverages": |
29 | (A) Recognized in the official United States Pharmacopoeia, official Homeopathic |
30 | Pharmacopoeia of the United States, or official National Formulary, and supplement to any of |
31 | them; or |
32 | (B) Intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of |
33 | disease; or |
34 | (C) Intended to affect the structure or any function of the body. |
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1 | "Drug" shall also include insulin and medical oxygen whether or not sold on prescription |
2 | and medical marijuana as defined in § 21-28.6-3. |
3 | (ii) "Over-the-counter drug" means a drug that contains a label that identifies the product |
4 | as a drug as required by 21 C.F.R. § 201.66. The "over-the-counter drug" label includes: |
5 | (A) A "Drug Facts" panel; or |
6 | (B) A statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a list of those ingredients contained in |
7 | the compound, substance, or preparation. |
8 | "Over-the-counter drug" shall not include "grooming and hygiene products." |
9 | (iii) "Grooming and hygiene products" are soaps and cleaning solutions, shampoo, |
10 | toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and suntan lotions and screens, regardless of whether the |
11 | items meet the definition of "over-the-counter drugs." |
12 | (iv) "Prescription" means an order, formula, or recipe issued in any form of oral, written, |
13 | electronic, or other means of transmission by a duly licensed practitioner authorized by the laws |
14 | of the member state. |
15 | (i) "Delivery charges" means charges by the seller of personal property or services for |
16 | preparation and delivery to a location designated by the purchaser of personal property or services |
17 | including, but not limited to: transportation, shipping, postage, handling, crating, and packing. |
18 | "Delivery charges" shall not include the charges for delivery of "direct mail" if the |
19 | charges are separately stated on an invoice or similar billing document given to the purchaser. |
20 | (j) "Direct mail" means printed material delivered or distributed by United States mail or |
21 | other delivery service to a mass audience or to addressees on a mailing list provided by the |
22 | purchaser or at the direction of the purchaser when the cost of the items are not billed directly to |
23 | the recipients. "Direct mail" includes tangible personal property supplied directly or indirectly by |
24 | the purchaser to the direct mail seller for inclusion in the package containing the printed material. |
25 | "Direct mail" does not include multiple items of printed material delivered to a single address. |
26 | (k) "Durable medical equipment" means equipment including repair and replacement |
27 | parts for same which: |
28 | (i) Can withstand repeated use; and |
29 | (ii) Is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose; and |
30 | (iii) Generally is not useful to a person in the absence of illness or injury; and |
31 | (iv) Is not worn in or on the body. |
32 | Durable medical equipment does not include mobility enhancing equipment. |
33 | (l) Food and related items. |
34 | (i) "Food and food ingredients" means substances, whether in liquid, concentrated, solid, |
| LC000710 - Page 62 of 87 |
1 | frozen, dried, or dehydrated form, that are sold for ingestion or chewing by humans and are |
2 | consumed for their taste or nutritional value. "Food and food ingredients" does not include |
3 | "alcoholic beverages", "tobacco", "candy", "dietary supplements", and "soft drinks." |
4 | (ii) "Prepared food" means: |
5 | (A) Food sold in a heated state or heated by the seller; |
6 | (B) Two (2) or more food ingredients mixed or combined by the seller for sale as a single |
7 | item; or |
8 | (C) Food sold with eating utensils provided by the seller, including: plates, knives, forks, |
9 | spoons, glasses, cups, napkins, or straws. A plate does not include a container or packaging used |
10 | to transport the food. |
11 | "Prepared food" in (B) does not include food that is only cut, repackaged, or pasteurized |
12 | by the seller, and eggs, fish, meat, poultry, and foods containing these raw animal foods requiring |
13 | cooking by the consumer as recommended by the Food and Drug Administration in chapter 3, |
14 | part 401.11 of its Food Code so as to prevent food borne illnesses. |
15 | (iii) "Candy" means a preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial sweeteners |
16 | in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts, or other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, |
17 | drops, or pieces. "Candy" shall not include any preparation containing flour and shall require no |
18 | refrigeration. |
19 | (iv) "Soft drinks" means non-alcoholic beverages that contain natural or artificial |
20 | sweeteners. "Soft drinks" do not include beverages that contain milk or milk products, soy, rice, |
21 | or similar milk substitutes, or greater than fifty percent (50%) of vegetable or fruit juice by |
22 | volume. |
23 | (v) "Dietary supplement" means any product, other than "tobacco", intended to |
24 | supplement the diet that: |
25 | (A) Contains one or more of the following dietary ingredients: |
26 | 1. A vitamin; |
27 | 2. A mineral; |
28 | 3. An herb or other botanical; |
29 | 4. An amino acid; |
30 | 5. A dietary substance for use by humans to supplement the diet by increasing the total |
31 | dietary intake; or |
32 | 6. A concentrate, metabolite, constituent, extract, or combination of any ingredient |
33 | described above; and |
34 | (B) Is intended for ingestion in tablet, capsule, powder, softgel, gelcap, or liquid form, or |
| LC000710 - Page 63 of 87 |
1 | if not intended for ingestion in such a form, is not represented as conventional food and is not |
2 | represented for use as a sole item of a meal or of the diet; and |
3 | (C) Is required to be labeled as a dietary supplement, identifiable by the "supplemental |
4 | facts" box found on the label and as required pursuant to 21 C.F.R. § 101.36. |
5 | (m) "Food sold through vending machines" means food dispensed from a machine or |
6 | other mechanical device that accepts payment. |
7 | (n) "Hotel" means every building or other structure kept, used, maintained, advertised as, |
8 | or held out to the public to be a place where living quarters are supplied for pay to transient or |
9 | permanent guests and tenants and includes a motel. |
10 | (i) "Living quarters" means sleeping rooms, sleeping or housekeeping accommodations, |
11 | or any other room or accommodation in any part of the hotel, rooming house, or tourist camp that |
12 | is available for or rented out for hire in the lodging of guests. |
13 | (ii) "Rooming house" means every house, boat, vehicle, motor court, or other structure |
14 | kept, used, maintained, advertised, or held out to the public to be a place where living quarters are |
15 | supplied for pay to transient or permanent guests or tenants, whether in one or adjoining |
16 | buildings. |
17 | (iii) "Tourist camp" means a place where tents or tent houses, or camp cottages, or cabins |
18 | or other structures are located and offered to the public or any segment thereof for human |
19 | habitation. |
20 | (o) "Lease or rental" means any transfer of possession or control of tangible personal |
21 | property for a fixed or indeterminate term for consideration. A lease or rental may include future |
22 | options to purchase or extend. Lease or rental does not include: |
23 | (i) A transfer of possession or control of property under a security agreement or deferred |
24 | payment plan that requires the transfer of title upon completion of the required payments; |
25 | (ii) A transfer of possession or control of property under an agreement that requires the |
26 | transfer of title upon completion of required payments and payment of an option price does not |
27 | exceed the greater of one hundred dollars ($100) or one percent of the total required payments; or |
28 | (iii) Providing tangible personal property along with an operator for a fixed or |
29 | indeterminate period of time. A condition of this exclusion is that the operator is necessary for |
30 | the equipment to perform as designed. For the purpose of this subsection, an operator must do |
31 | more than maintain, inspect, or set-up the tangible personal property. |
32 | (iv) Lease or rental does include agreements covering motor vehicles and trailers where |
33 | the amount of consideration may be increased or decreased by reference to the amount realized |
34 | upon sale or disposition of the property as defined in 26 U.S.C. § 7701(h)(1). |
| LC000710 - Page 64 of 87 |
1 | (v) This definition shall be used for sales and use tax purposes regardless if a transaction |
2 | is characterized as a lease or rental under generally accepted accounting principles, the Internal |
3 | Revenue Code, the Uniform Commercial Code, or other provisions of federal, state, or local law. |
4 | (vi) This definition will be applied only prospectively from the date of adoption and will |
5 | have no retroactive impact on existing leases or rentals. This definition shall neither impact any |
6 | existing sale-leaseback exemption or exclusions that a state may have, nor preclude a state from |
7 | adopting a sale-leaseback exemption or exclusion after the effective date of the agreement. |
8 | (p) "Mobility enhancing equipment" means equipment, including repair and replacement |
9 | parts to same, that: |
10 | (i) Is primarily and customarily used to provide or increase the ability to move from one |
11 | place to another and that is appropriate for use either in a home or a motor vehicle; and |
12 | (ii) Is not generally used by persons with normal mobility; and |
13 | (iii) Does not include any motor vehicle or equipment on a motor vehicle normally |
14 | provided by a motor vehicle manufacturer. |
15 | Mobility enhancing equipment does not include durable medical equipment. |
16 | (q) "Model 1 Seller" means a seller that has selected a CSP as its agent to perform all the |
17 | seller's sales and use tax functions, other than the seller's obligation to remit tax on its own |
18 | purchases. |
19 | (r) "Model 2 Seller" means a seller that has selected a CAS to perform part of its sales |
20 | and use tax functions, but retains responsibility for remitting the tax. |
21 | (s) "Model 3 Seller" means a seller that has sales in at least five member states, has total |
22 | annual sales revenue of at least five hundred million dollars ($500,000,000), has a proprietary |
23 | system that calculates the amount of tax due each jurisdiction, and has entered into a performance |
24 | agreement with the member states that establishes a tax performance standard for the seller. As |
25 | used in this definition, a seller includes an affiliated group of sellers using the same proprietary |
26 | system. |
27 | (t) "Prosthetic device" means a replacement, corrective, or supportive device including |
28 | repair and replacement parts for same worn on or in the body to: |
29 | (i) Artificially replace a missing portion of the body; |
30 | (ii) Prevent or correct physical deformity or malfunction; or |
31 | (iii) Support a weak or deformed portion of the body. |
32 | (u) "Purchaser" means a person to whom a sale of personal property is made or to whom |
33 | a service is furnished. |
34 | (v) "Purchase price" applies to the measure subject to use tax and has the same meaning |
| LC000710 - Page 65 of 87 |
1 | as sales price. |
2 | (w) "Seller" means a person making sales, leases, or rentals of personal property or |
3 | services. |
4 | (x) "State" means any state of the United States and the District of Columbia. |
5 | (y) "Telecommunications" tax base/exemption terms. |
6 | (i) Telecommunication terms shall be defined as follows: |
7 | (A) "Ancillary services" means services that are associated with or incidental to the |
8 | provision of "telecommunications services", including, but not limited to, "detailed |
9 | telecommunications billing", "directory assistance", "vertical service", and "voice mail services". |
10 | (B) "Conference bridging service" means an "ancillary service" that links two (2) or more |
11 | participants of an audio or video conference call and may include the provision of a telephone |
12 | number. "Conference bridging service" does not include the "telecommunications services" used |
13 | to reach the conference bridge. |
14 | (C) "Detailed telecommunications billing service" means an "ancillary service" of |
15 | separately stating information pertaining to individual calls on a customer's billing statement. |
16 | (D) "Directory assistance" means an "ancillary service" of providing telephone number |
17 | information, and/or address information. |
18 | (E) "Vertical service" means an "ancillary service" that is offered in connection with one |
19 | or more "telecommunications services", which offers advanced calling features that allow |
20 | customers to identify callers and to manage multiple calls and call connections, including |
21 | "conference bridging services". |
22 | (F) "Voice mail service" means an "ancillary service" that enables the customer to store, |
23 | send, or receive recorded messages. "Voice mail service" does not include any "vertical services" |
24 | that the customer may be required to have in order to utilize the "voice mail service". |
25 | (G) "Telecommunications service" means the electronic transmission, conveyance, or |
26 | routing of voice, data, audio, video, or any other information or signals to a point, or between or |
27 | among points. The term "telecommunications service" includes such transmission, conveyance, |
28 | or routing in which computer processing applications are used to act on the form, code, or |
29 | protocol of the content for purposes of transmission, conveyance, or routing without regard to |
30 | whether such service is referred to as voice over internet protocol services or is classified by the |
31 | Federal Communications Commission as enhanced or value added. "Telecommunications |
32 | service" does not include: |
33 | (1) Data processing and information services that allow data to be generated, acquired, |
34 | stored, processed, or retrieved and delivered by an electronic transmission to a purchaser where |
| LC000710 - Page 66 of 87 |
1 | such purchaser's primary purpose for the underlying transaction is the processed data or |
2 | information; |
3 | (2) Installation or maintenance of wiring or equipment on a customer's premises; |
4 | (3) Tangible personal property; |
5 | (4) Advertising, including, but not limited to, directory advertising; |
6 | (5) Billing and collection services provided to third parties; |
7 | (6) Internet access service; |
8 | (7) Radio and television audio and video programming services, regardless of the |
9 | medium, including the furnishing of transmission, conveyance, and routing of such services by |
10 | the programming service provider. Radio and television audio and video programming services |
11 | shall include, but not be limited to, cable service as defined in 47 U.S.C. § 522(6) and audio and |
12 | video programming services delivered by commercial mobile radio service providers as defined |
13 | in 47 C.F.R. § 20.3; |
14 | (8) "Ancillary services"; or |
15 | (9) Digital products "delivered electronically", including, but not limited to: software, |
16 | music, video, reading materials, or ring tones. |
17 | (H) "800 service" means a "telecommunications service" that allows a caller to dial a toll- |
18 | free number without incurring a charge for the call. The service is typically marketed under the |
19 | name "800", "855", "866", "877", and "888" toll-free calling, and any subsequent numbers |
20 | designated by the Federal Communications Commission. |
21 | (I) "900 service" means an inbound toll "telecommunications service" purchased by a |
22 | subscriber that allows the subscriber's customers to call in to the subscriber's prerecorded |
23 | announcement or live service. "900 service" does not include the charge for: collection services |
24 | provided by the seller of the "telecommunications services" to the subscriber, or service or |
25 | product sold by the subscriber to the subscriber's customer. The service is typically marketed |
26 | under the name "900 service," and any subsequent numbers designated by the Federal |
27 | Communications Commission. |
28 | (J) "Fixed wireless service" means a "telecommunications service" that provides radio |
29 | communication between fixed points. |
30 | (K) "Mobile wireless service" means a "telecommunications service" that is transmitted, |
31 | conveyed, or routed regardless of the technology used, whereby the origination and/or |
32 | termination points of the transmission, conveyance, or routing are not fixed, including, by way of |
33 | example only, "telecommunications services" that are provided by a commercial mobile radio |
34 | service provider. |
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1 | (L) "Paging service" means a "telecommunications service" that provides transmission of |
2 | coded radio signals for the purpose of activating specific pagers; such transmissions may include |
3 | messages and/or sounds. |
4 | (M) "Prepaid calling service" means the right to access exclusively "telecommunications |
5 | services", which must be paid for in advance and that enables the origination of calls using an |
6 | access number or authorization code, whether manually or electronically dialed, and that is sold |
7 | in predetermined units or dollars of which the number declines with use in a known amount. |
8 | (N) "Prepaid wireless calling service" means a "telecommunications service" that |
9 | provides the right to utilize "mobile wireless service", as well as other non-telecommunications |
10 | services, including the download of digital products "delivered electronically", content and |
11 | "ancillary services" which must be paid for in advance that is sold in predetermined units of |
12 | dollars of which the number declines with use in a known amount. |
13 | (O) "Private communications service" means a telecommunications service that entitles |
14 | the customer to exclusive or priority use of a communications channel or group of channels |
15 | between or among termination points, regardless of the manner in which such channel or |
16 | channels are connected, and includes switching capacity, extension lines, stations, and any other |
17 | associated services that are provided in connection with the use of such channel or channels. |
18 | (P) "Value-added non-voice data service" means a service that otherwise meets the |
19 | definition of "telecommunications services" in which computer processing applications are used |
20 | to act on the form, content, code, or protocol of the information or data primarily for a purpose |
21 | other than transmission, conveyance, or routing. |
22 | (ii) "Modifiers of Sales Tax Base/Exemption Terms" -- the following terms can be used |
23 | to further delineate the type of "telecommunications service" to be taxed or exempted. The terms |
24 | would be used with the broader terms and subcategories delineated above. |
25 | (A) "Coin-operated telephone service" means a "telecommunications service" paid for by |
26 | inserting money into a telephone accepting direct deposits of money to operate. |
27 | (B) "International" means a "telecommunications service" that originates or terminates in |
28 | the United States and terminates or originates outside the United States, respectively. United |
29 | States includes the District of Columbia or a U.S. territory or possession. |
30 | (C) "Interstate" means a "telecommunications service" that originates in one United |
31 | States state, or a United States territory or possession, and terminates in a different United States |
32 | state or a United States territory or possession. |
33 | (D) "Intrastate" means a "telecommunications service" that originates in one United |
34 | States state or a United States territory or possession, and terminates in the same United States |
| LC000710 - Page 68 of 87 |
1 | state or a United States territory or possession. |
2 | (E) "Pay telephone service" means a "telecommunications service" provided through any |
3 | pay telephone. |
4 | (F) "Residential telecommunications service" means a "telecommunications service" or |
5 | "ancillary services" provided to an individual for personal use at a residential address, including |
6 | an individual dwelling unit such as an apartment. In the case of institutions where individuals |
7 | reside, such as schools or nursing homes, "telecommunications service" is considered residential |
8 | if it is provided to and paid for by an individual resident rather than the institution. |
9 | The terms "ancillary services" and "telecommunications service" are defined as a broad |
10 | range of services. The terms "ancillary services" and "telecommunications service" are broader |
11 | than the sum of the subcategories. Definitions of subcategories of "ancillary services" and |
12 | "telecommunications service" can be used by a member state alone or in combination with other |
13 | subcategories to define a narrower tax base than the definitions of "ancillary services" and |
14 | "telecommunications service" would imply. The subcategories can also be used by a member |
15 | state to provide exemptions for certain subcategories of the more broadly defined terms. |
16 | A member state that specifically imposes tax on, or exempts from tax, local telephone or |
17 | local telecommunications service may define "local service" in any manner in accordance with § |
18 | 44-18.1-28, except as limited by other sections of this Agreement. |
19 | (z) "Tobacco" means cigarettes, cigars, chewing, or pipe tobacco, or any other item that |
20 | contains tobacco. |
21 | 44-18-30. Gross receipts exempt from sales and use taxes. |
22 | There are exempted from the taxes imposed by this chapter the following gross receipts: |
23 | (1) Sales and uses beyond constitutional power of state. From the sale and from the |
24 | storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tangible personal property the gross receipts |
25 | from the sale of which, or the storage, use, or other consumption of which, this state is prohibited |
26 | from taxing under the Constitution of the United States or under the constitution of this state. |
27 | (2) Newspapers. |
28 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of any |
29 | newspaper. |
30 | (ii) "Newspaper" means an unbound publication printed on newsprint that contains news, |
31 | editorial comment, opinions, features, advertising matter, and other matters of public interest. |
32 | (iii) "Newspaper" does not include a magazine, handbill, circular, flyer, sales catalog, or |
33 | similar item unless the item is printed for, and distributed as, a part of a newspaper. |
34 | (3) School meals. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this |
| LC000710 - Page 69 of 87 |
1 | state of meals served by public, private, or parochial schools, school districts, colleges, |
2 | universities, student organizations, and parent-teacher associations to the students or teachers of a |
3 | school, college, or university whether the meals are served by the educational institutions or by a |
4 | food service or management entity under contract to the educational institutions. |
5 | (4) Containers. |
6 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of: |
7 | (A) Non-returnable containers, including boxes, paper bags, and wrapping materials that |
8 | are biodegradable and all bags and wrapping materials utilized in the medical and healing arts, |
9 | when sold without the contents to persons who place the contents in the container and sell the |
10 | contents with the container. |
11 | (B) Containers when sold with the contents if the sale price of the contents is not required |
12 | to be included in the measure of the taxes imposed by this chapter. |
13 | (C) Returnable containers when sold with the contents in connection with a retail sale of |
14 | the contents or when resold for refilling. |
15 | (D) Keg and barrel containers, whether returnable or not, when sold to alcoholic beverage |
16 | producers who place the alcoholic beverages in the containers. |
17 | (ii) As used in this subdivision, the term "returnable containers" means containers of a |
18 | kind customarily returned by the buyer of the contents for reuse. All other containers are "non- |
19 | returnable containers". |
20 | (5)(i) Charitable, educational, and religious organizations. From the sale to, as in defined |
21 | in this section, and from the storage, use, and other consumption in this state, or any other state of |
22 | the United States of America, of tangible personal property by hospitals not operated for a profit; |
23 | "educational institutions" as defined in subdivision (18) not operated for a profit; churches, |
24 | orphanages, and other institutions or organizations operated exclusively for religious or charitable |
25 | purposes; interest-free loan associations not operated for profit; nonprofit, organized sporting |
26 | leagues and associations and bands for boys and girls under the age of nineteen (19) years; the |
27 | following vocational student organizations that are state chapters of national vocational student |
28 | organizations: Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA); Future Business Leaders of |
29 | America, Phi Beta Lambda (FBLA/PBL); Future Farmers of America (FFA); Future |
30 | Homemakers of America/Home Economics Related Occupations (FHA/HERD); Vocational |
31 | Industrial Clubs of America (VICA); organized nonprofit golden age and senior citizens clubs for |
32 | men and women; and parent-teacher associations; and from the sale, storage, use, and other |
33 | consumption in this state, of and by the Industrial Foundation of Burrillville, a Rhode Island |
34 | domestic nonprofit corporation. |
| LC000710 - Page 70 of 87 |
1 | (ii) In the case of contracts entered into with the federal government, its agencies, or |
2 | instrumentalities, this state, or any other state of the United States of America, its agencies, any |
3 | city, town, district, or other political subdivision of the states; hospitals not operated for profit; |
4 | educational institutions not operated for profit; churches, orphanages, and other institutions or |
5 | organizations operated exclusively for religious or charitable purposes, the contractor may |
6 | purchase such materials and supplies (materials and/or supplies are defined as those that are |
7 | essential to the project) that are to be utilized in the construction of the projects being performed |
8 | under the contracts without payment of the tax. |
9 | (iii) The contractor shall not charge any sales or use tax to any exempt agency, |
10 | institution, or organization but shall in that instance provide his or her suppliers with certificates |
11 | in the form as determined by the division of taxation showing the reason for exemption and the |
12 | contractor's records must substantiate the claim for exemption by showing the disposition of all |
13 | property so purchased. If any property is then used for a nonexempt purpose, the contractor must |
14 | pay the tax on the property used. |
15 | (6) Gasoline. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state |
16 | of: (i) gasoline and other products taxed under chapter 36 of title 31 and (ii) fuels used for the |
17 | propulsion of airplanes. |
18 | (7) Purchase for manufacturing purposes. |
19 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of computer |
20 | software, tangible personal property, electricity, natural gas, artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, |
21 | and water, when the property or service is purchased for the purpose of being manufactured into a |
22 | finished product for resale and becomes an ingredient, component, or integral part of the |
23 | manufactured, compounded, processed, assembled, or prepared product, or if the property or |
24 | service is consumed in the process of manufacturing for resale computer software, tangible |
25 | personal property, electricity, natural gas, artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, or water. |
26 | (ii) "Consumed" means destroyed, used up, or worn out to the degree or extent that the |
27 | property cannot be repaired, reconditioned, or rendered fit for further manufacturing use. |
28 | (iii) "Consumed" includes mere obsolescence. |
29 | (iv) "Manufacturing" means and includes: manufacturing, compounding, processing, |
30 | assembling, preparing, or producing. |
31 | (v) "Process of manufacturing" means and includes all production operations performed |
32 | in the producing or processing room, shop, or plant, insofar as the operations are a part of and |
33 | connected with the manufacturing for resale of tangible personal property, electricity, natural gas, |
34 | artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, or water and all production operations performed insofar as the |
| LC000710 - Page 71 of 87 |
1 | operations are a part of and connected with the manufacturing for resale of computer software. |
2 | (vi) "Process of manufacturing" does not mean or include administration operations such |
3 | as general office operations, accounting, collection, or sales promotion, nor does it mean or |
4 | include distribution operations that occur subsequent to production operations, such as handling, |
5 | storing, selling, and transporting the manufactured products, even though the administration and |
6 | distribution operations are performed by, or in connection with, a manufacturing business. |
7 | (8) State and political subdivisions. From the sale to, and from the storage, use, or other |
8 | consumption by, this state, any city, town, district, or other political subdivision of this state. |
9 | Every redevelopment agency created pursuant to chapter 31 of title 45 is deemed to be a |
10 | subdivision of the municipality where it is located. |
11 | (9) Food and food ingredients. From the sale and storage, use, or other consumption in |
12 | this state of food and food ingredients as defined in § 44-18-7.1(l). |
13 | For the purposes of this exemption "food and food ingredients" shall not include candy, |
14 | soft drinks, dietary supplements, alcoholic beverages, tobacco, food sold through vending |
15 | machines, or prepared food, as those terms are defined in § 44-18-7.1, unless the prepared food is: |
16 | (i) Sold by a seller whose primary NAICS classification is manufacturing in sector 311, |
17 | except sub-sector 3118 (bakeries); |
18 | (ii) Sold in an unheated state by weight or volume as a single item; |
19 | (iii) Bakery items, including: bread, rolls, buns, biscuits, bagels, croissants, pastries, |
20 | donuts, danish, cakes, tortes, pies, tarts, muffins, bars, cookies, tortillas; and |
21 | is not sold with utensils provided by the seller, including: plates, knives, forks, spoons, |
22 | glasses, cups, napkins, or straws. |
23 | (10) Medicines, drugs, and durable medical equipment. From the sale and from the |
24 | storage, use, or other consumption in this state, of: |
25 | (i) "Drugs" as defined in § 44-18-7.1(h)(i), sold on prescriptions, medical oxygen, and |
26 | insulin whether or not sold on prescription and medical marijuana as defined in § 21-28.6-3. For |
27 | purposes of this exemption drugs shall not include over-the-counter drugs and grooming and |
28 | hygiene products as defined in § 44-18-7.1(h)(iii). |
29 | (ii) Durable medical equipment as defined in § 44-18-7.1(k) for home use only, |
30 | including, but not limited to: syringe infusers, ambulatory drug delivery pumps, hospital beds, |
31 | convalescent chairs, and chair lifts. Supplies used in connection with syringe infusers and |
32 | ambulatory drug delivery pumps that are sold on prescription to individuals to be used by them to |
33 | dispense or administer prescription drugs, and related ancillary dressings and supplies used to |
34 | dispense or administer prescription drugs, shall also be exempt from tax. |
| LC000710 - Page 72 of 87 |
1 | (11) Prosthetic devices and mobility enhancing equipment. From the sale and from the |
2 | storage, use, or other consumption in this state, of prosthetic devices as defined in § 44-18-7.1(t), |
3 | sold on prescription, including, but not limited to: artificial limbs, dentures, spectacles, |
4 | eyeglasses, and artificial eyes; artificial hearing devices and hearing aids, whether or not sold on |
5 | prescription; and mobility enhancing equipment as defined in § 44-18-7.1(p), including |
6 | wheelchairs, crutches, and canes. |
7 | (12) Coffins, caskets, and burial garments. From the sale and from the storage, use, or |
8 | other consumption in this state of coffins or caskets, and shrouds or other burial garments that are |
9 | ordinarily sold by a funeral director as part of the business of funeral directing. |
10 | (13) Motor vehicles sold to nonresidents. |
11 | (i) From the sale, subsequent to June 30, 1958, of a motor vehicle to a bona fide |
12 | nonresident of this state who does not register the motor vehicle in this state, whether the sale or |
13 | delivery of the motor vehicle is made in this state or at the place of residence of the nonresident. |
14 | A motor vehicle sold to a bona fide nonresident whose state of residence does not allow a like |
15 | exemption to its nonresidents is not exempt from the tax imposed under § 44-18-20. In that event, |
16 | the bona fide nonresident pays a tax to Rhode Island on the sale at a rate equal to the rate that |
17 | would be imposed in his or her state of residence not to exceed the rate that would have been |
18 | imposed under § 44-18-20. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, a licensed motor vehicle |
19 | dealer shall add and collect the tax required under this subdivision and remit the tax to the tax |
20 | administrator under the provisions of chapters 18 and 19 of this title. When a Rhode Island |
21 | licensed, motor vehicle dealer is required to add and collect the sales and use tax on the sale of a |
22 | motor vehicle to a bona fide nonresident as provided in this section, the dealer in computing the |
23 | tax takes into consideration the law of the state of the nonresident as it relates to the trade-in of |
24 | motor vehicles. |
25 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
26 | require any licensed motor vehicle dealer to keep records of sales to bona fide nonresidents as the |
27 | tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the exemption provided in this |
28 | subdivision, including the affidavit of a licensed motor vehicle dealer that the purchaser of the |
29 | motor vehicle was the holder of, and had in his or her possession a valid out-of-state motor |
30 | vehicle registration or a valid out-of-state driver's license. |
31 | (iii) Any nonresident who registers a motor vehicle in this state within ninety (90) days of |
32 | the date of its sale to him or her is deemed to have purchased the motor vehicle for use, storage, |
33 | or other consumption in this state, and is subject to, and liable for, the use tax imposed under the |
34 | provisions of § 44-18-20. |
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1 | (14) Sales in public buildings by blind people. From the sale and from the storage, use, or |
2 | other consumption in all public buildings in this state of all products or wares by any person |
3 | licensed under § 40-9-11.1. |
4 | (15) Air and water pollution control facilities. From the sale, storage, use, or other |
5 | consumption in this state of tangible personal property or supplies acquired for incorporation into |
6 | or used and consumed in the operation of a facility, the primary purpose of which is to aid in the |
7 | control of the pollution or contamination of the waters or air of the state, as defined in chapter 12 |
8 | of title 46 and chapter 23 of title 23, respectively, and that has been certified as approved for that |
9 | purpose by the director of environmental management. The director of environmental |
10 | management may certify to a portion of the tangible personal property or supplies acquired for |
11 | incorporation into those facilities or used and consumed in the operation of those facilities to the |
12 | extent that that portion has as its primary purpose the control of the pollution or contamination of |
13 | the waters or air of this state. As used in this subdivision, "facility" means any land, facility, |
14 | device, building, machinery, or equipment. |
15 | (16) Camps. From the rental charged for living quarters, or sleeping, or housekeeping |
16 | accommodations at camps or retreat houses operated by religious, charitable, educational, or |
17 | other organizations and associations mentioned in subsection (5), or by privately owned and |
18 | operated summer camps for children. |
19 | (17) Certain institutions. From the rental charged for living or sleeping quarters in an |
20 | institution licensed by the state for the hospitalization, custodial, or nursing care of human beings. |
21 | (18) Educational institutions. From the rental charged by any educational institution for |
22 | living quarters, or sleeping, or housekeeping accommodations or other rooms or accommodations |
23 | to any student or teacher necessitated by attendance at an educational institution. "Educational |
24 | institution" as used in this section means an institution of learning not operated for profit that is |
25 | empowered to confer diplomas, educational, literary, or academic degrees; that has a regular |
26 | faculty, curriculum, and organized body of pupils or students in attendance throughout the usual |
27 | school year; that keeps and furnishes to students and others records required and accepted for |
28 | entrance to schools of secondary, collegiate, or graduate rank; and no part of the net earnings of |
29 | which inures to the benefit of any individual. |
30 | (19) Motor vehicle and adaptive equipment for persons with disabilities. |
31 | (i) From the sale of: (A) Special adaptations; (B) The component parts of the special |
32 | adaptations; or (C) A specially adapted motor vehicle; provided that the owner furnishes to the |
33 | tax administrator an affidavit of a licensed physician to the effect that the specially adapted motor |
34 | vehicle is necessary to transport a family member with a disability or where the vehicle has been |
| LC000710 - Page 74 of 87 |
1 | specially adapted to meet the specific needs of the person with a disability. This exemption |
2 | applies to not more than one motor vehicle owned and registered for personal, noncommercial |
3 | use. |
4 | (ii) For the purpose of this subsection the term "special adaptations" includes, but is not |
5 | limited to: wheelchair lifts, wheelchair carriers, wheelchair ramps, wheelchair securements, hand |
6 | controls, steering devices, extensions, relocations, and crossovers of operator controls, power- |
7 | assisted controls, raised tops or dropped floors, raised entry doors, or alternative signaling devices |
8 | to auditory signals. |
9 | (iii) From the sale of: (a) Special adaptations, (b) The component parts of the special |
10 | adaptations, for a "wheelchair accessible taxicab" as defined in § 39-14-1, and/or a "wheelchair |
11 | accessible public motor vehicle" as defined in § 39-14.1-1. |
12 | (iv) For the purpose of this subdivision the exemption for a "specially adapted motor |
13 | vehicle" means a use tax credit not to exceed the amount of use tax that would otherwise be due |
14 | on the motor vehicle, exclusive of any adaptations. The use tax credit is equal to the cost of the |
15 | special adaptations, including installation. |
16 | (20) Heating fuels. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this |
17 | state of every type of heating fuel. |
18 | (21) Electricity and gas. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in |
19 | this state of electricity and gas. |
20 | (22) Manufacturing machinery and equipment. |
21 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tools, |
22 | dies, molds, machinery, equipment (including replacement parts), and related items to the extent |
23 | used in an industrial plant in connection with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of |
24 | tangible personal property, or to the extent used in connection with the actual manufacture, |
25 | conversion, or processing of computer software as that term is utilized in industry numbers 7371, |
26 | 7372, and 7373 in the standard industrial classification manual prepared by the Technical |
27 | Committee on Industrial Classification, Office of Statistical Standards, Executive Office of the |
28 | President, United States Bureau of the Budget, as revised from time to time, to be sold, or that |
29 | machinery and equipment used in the furnishing of power to an industrial manufacturing plant. |
30 | For the purposes of this subdivision, "industrial plant" means a factory at a fixed location |
31 | primarily engaged in the manufacture, conversion, or processing of tangible personal property to |
32 | be sold in the regular course of business; |
33 | (ii) Machinery and equipment and related items are not deemed to be used in connection |
34 | with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of tangible personal property, or in |
| LC000710 - Page 75 of 87 |
1 | connection with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of computer software as that |
2 | term is utilized in industry numbers 7371, 7372, and 7373 in the standard industrial classification |
3 | manual prepared by the Technical Committee on Industrial Classification, Office of Statistical |
4 | Standards, Executive Office of the President, United States Bureau of the Budget, as revised from |
5 | time to time, to be sold to the extent the property is used in administration or distribution |
6 | operations; |
7 | (iii) Machinery and equipment and related items used in connection with the actual |
8 | manufacture, conversion, or processing of any computer software or any tangible personal |
9 | property that is not to be sold and that would be exempt under subdivision (7) or this subdivision |
10 | if purchased from a vendor or machinery and equipment and related items used during any |
11 | manufacturing, converting, or processing function is exempt under this subdivision even if that |
12 | operation, function, or purpose is not an integral or essential part of a continuous production flow |
13 | or manufacturing process; |
14 | (iv) Where a portion of a group of portable or mobile machinery is used in connection |
15 | with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of computer software or tangible personal |
16 | property to be sold, as previously defined, that portion, if otherwise qualifying, is exempt under |
17 | this subdivision even though the machinery in that group is used interchangeably and not |
18 | otherwise identifiable as to use. |
19 | (23) Trade-in value of motor vehicles. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
20 | consumption in this state of so much of the purchase price paid for a new or used automobile as is |
21 | allocated for a trade-in allowance on the automobile of the buyer given in trade to the seller, or of |
22 | the proceeds applicable only to the automobile as are received from the manufacturer of |
23 | automobiles for the repurchase of the automobile whether the repurchase was voluntary or not |
24 | towards the purchase of a new or used automobile by the buyer. For the purpose of this |
25 | subdivision, the word "automobile" means a private passenger automobile not used for hire and |
26 | does not refer to any other type of motor vehicle. |
27 | (24) Precious metal bullion. |
28 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of precious |
29 | metal bullion, substantially equivalent to a transaction in securities or commodities. |
30 | (ii) For purposes of this subdivision, "precious metal bullion" means any elementary |
31 | precious metal that has been put through a process of smelting or refining, including, but not |
32 | limited to: gold, silver, platinum, rhodium, and chromium, and that is in a state or condition that |
33 | its value depends upon its content and not upon its form. |
34 | (iii) The term does not include fabricated precious metal that has been processed or |
| LC000710 - Page 76 of 87 |
1 | manufactured for some one or more specific and customary industrial, professional, or artistic |
2 | uses. |
3 | (25) Commercial vessels. From sales made to a commercial ship, barge, or other vessel of |
4 | fifty (50) tons burden or over, primarily engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, and from the |
5 | repair, alteration, or conversion of the vessels, and from the sale of property purchased for the use |
6 | of the vessels including provisions, supplies, and material for the maintenance and/or repair of the |
7 | vessels. |
8 | (26) Commercial fishing vessels. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
9 | consumption in this state of vessels and other watercraft that are in excess of five (5) net tons and |
10 | that are used exclusively for "commercial fishing", as defined in this subdivision, and from the |
11 | repair, alteration, or conversion of those vessels and other watercraft, and from the sale of |
12 | property purchased for the use of those vessels and other watercraft including provisions, |
13 | supplies, and material for the maintenance and/or repair of the vessels and other watercraft and |
14 | the boats nets, cables, tackle, and other fishing equipment appurtenant to or used in connection |
15 | with the commercial fishing of the vessels and other watercraft. "Commercial fishing" means |
16 | taking or attempting to take any fish, shellfish, crustacea, or bait species with the intent of |
17 | disposing of it for profit or by sale, barter, trade, or in commercial channels. The term does not |
18 | include subsistence fishing, i.e., the taking for personal use and not for sale or barter; or sport |
19 | fishing; but shall include vessels and other watercraft with a Rhode Island party and charter boat |
20 | license issued by the department of environmental management pursuant to § 20-2-27.1 that meet |
21 | the following criteria: (i) The operator must have a current U.S.C.G. license to carry passengers |
22 | for hire; (ii) U.S.C.G. vessel documentation in the coast wide fishery trade; (iii) U.S.C.G. vessel |
23 | documentation as to proof of Rhode Island home port status or a Rhode Island boat registration to |
24 | prove Rhode Island home port status; and (iv) The vessel must be used as a commercial passenger |
25 | carrying fishing vessel to carry passengers for fishing. The vessel must be able to demonstrate |
26 | that at least fifty percent (50%) of its annual gross income derives from charters or provides |
27 | documentation of a minimum of one hundred (100) charter trips annually; and (v) The vessel |
28 | must have a valid Rhode Island party and charter boat license. The tax administrator shall |
29 | implement the provisions of this subdivision by promulgating rules and regulations relating |
30 | thereto. |
31 | (27) Clothing and footwear. From the sales of articles of clothing, including footwear, |
32 | intended to be worn or carried on or about the human body for sales prior to October 1, 2012. |
33 | Effective October 1, 2012, the exemption will apply to the sales of articles of clothing, including |
34 | footwear, intended to be worn or carried on or about the human body up to two hundred and fifty |
| LC000710 - Page 77 of 87 |
1 | dollars ($250) of the sales price per item. For the purposes of this section, "clothing or footwear" |
2 | does not include clothing accessories or equipment or special clothing or footwear primarily |
3 | designed for athletic activity or protective use as these terms are defined in section 44-18-7.1(f). |
4 | In recognition of the work being performed by the streamlined sales and use tax governing board, |
5 | upon passage of any federal law that authorizes states to require remote sellers to collect and |
6 | remit sales and use taxes, this unlimited exemption will apply as it did prior to October 1, 2012. |
7 | The unlimited exemption on sales of clothing and footwear shall take effect on the date that the |
8 | state requires remote sellers to collect and remit sales and use taxes. |
9 | (28) Water for residential use. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
10 | consumption in this state of water furnished for domestic use by occupants of residential |
11 | premises. |
12 | (29) Bibles. [Unconstitutional; see Ahlburn v. Clark, 728 A.2d 449 (R.I. 1999); see Notes |
13 | to Decisions.] From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in the state of any |
14 | canonized scriptures of any tax-exempt nonprofit religious organization including, but not limited |
15 | to, the Old Testament and the New Testament versions. |
16 | (30) Boats. |
17 | (i) From the sale of a boat or vessel to a bona fide nonresident of this state who does not |
18 | register the boat or vessel in this state or document the boat or vessel with the United States |
19 | government at a home port within the state, whether the sale or delivery of the boat or vessel is |
20 | made in this state or elsewhere; provided, that the nonresident transports the boat within thirty |
21 | (30) days after delivery by the seller outside the state for use thereafter solely outside the state. |
22 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
23 | require the seller of the boat or vessel to keep records of the sales to bona fide nonresidents as the |
24 | tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the exemption provided in this |
25 | subdivision, including the affidavit of the seller that the buyer represented himself or herself to be |
26 | a bona fide nonresident of this state and of the buyer that he or she is a nonresident of this state. |
27 | (31) Youth activities equipment. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this |
28 | state of items for not more than twenty dollars ($20.00) each by nonprofit Rhode Island |
29 | eleemosynary organizations, for the purposes of youth activities that the organization is formed to |
30 | sponsor and support; and by accredited elementary and secondary schools for the purposes of the |
31 | schools or of organized activities of the enrolled students. |
32 | (32) Farm equipment. From the sale and from the storage or use of machinery and |
33 | equipment used directly for commercial farming and agricultural production; including, but not |
34 | limited to: tractors, ploughs, harrows, spreaders, seeders, milking machines, silage conveyors, |
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1 | balers, bulk milk storage tanks, trucks with farm plates, mowers, combines, irrigation equipment, |
2 | greenhouses and greenhouse coverings, graders and packaging machines, tools and supplies and |
3 | other farming equipment, including replacement parts appurtenant to or used in connection with |
4 | commercial farming and tools and supplies used in the repair and maintenance of farming |
5 | equipment. "Commercial farming" means the keeping or boarding of five (5) or more horses or |
6 | the production within this state of agricultural products, including, but not limited to, field or |
7 | orchard crops, livestock, dairy, and poultry, or their products, where the keeping, boarding, or |
8 | production provides at least two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) in annual gross sales to |
9 | the operator, whether an individual, a group, a partnership, or a corporation for exemptions issued |
10 | prior to July 1, 2002. For exemptions issued or renewed after July 1, 2002, there shall be two (2) |
11 | levels. Level I shall be based on proof of annual, gross sales from commercial farming of at least |
12 | twenty-five hundred dollars ($2,500) and shall be valid for purchases subject to the exemption |
13 | provided in this subdivision except for motor vehicles with an excise tax value of five thousand |
14 | dollars ($5,000) or greater. Level II shall be based on proof of annual gross sales from |
15 | commercial farming of at least ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or greater and shall be valid for |
16 | purchases subject to the exemption provided in this subdivision including motor vehicles with an |
17 | excise tax value of five thousand dollars ($5,000) or greater. For the initial issuance of the |
18 | exemptions, proof of the requisite amount of annual gross sales from commercial farming shall be |
19 | required for the prior year; for any renewal of an exemption granted in accordance with this |
20 | subdivision at either level I or level II, proof of gross annual sales from commercial farming at |
21 | the requisite amount shall be required for each of the prior two (2) years. Certificates of |
22 | exemption issued or renewed after July 1, 2002, shall clearly indicate the level of the exemption |
23 | and be valid for four (4) years after the date of issue. This exemption applies even if the same |
24 | equipment is used for ancillary uses, or is temporarily used for a non-farming or a non- |
25 | agricultural purpose, but shall not apply to motor vehicles acquired after July 1, 2002, unless the |
26 | vehicle is a farm vehicle as defined pursuant to § 31-1-8 and is eligible for registration displaying |
27 | farm plates as provided for in § 31-3-31. |
28 | (33) Compressed air. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in the |
29 | state of compressed air. |
30 | (34) Flags. From the sale and from the storage, consumption, or other use in this state of |
31 | United States, Rhode Island or POW-MIA flags. |
32 | (35) Motor vehicle and adaptive equipment to certain veterans. From the sale of a motor |
33 | vehicle and adaptive equipment to and for the use of a veteran with a service-connected loss of or |
34 | the loss of use of a leg, foot, hand, or arm, or any veteran who is a double amputee, whether |
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1 | service connected or not. The motor vehicle must be purchased by and especially equipped for |
2 | use by the qualifying veteran. Certificate of exemption or refunds of taxes paid is granted under |
3 | rules or regulations that the tax administrator may prescribe. |
4 | (36) Textbooks. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this |
5 | state of textbooks by an "educational institution", as defined in subsection (18) of this section, |
6 | and any educational institution within the purview of § 16-63-9(4), and used textbooks by any |
7 | purveyor. |
8 | (37) Tangible personal property and supplies used in on-site hazardous waste recycling, |
9 | reuse, or treatment. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tangible |
10 | personal property or supplies used or consumed in the operation of equipment, the exclusive |
11 | function of which is the recycling, reuse, or recovery of materials (other than precious metals, as |
12 | defined in subdivision (24)(ii) of this section) from the treatment of "hazardous wastes", as |
13 | defined in § 23-19.1-4, where the "hazardous wastes" are generated in Rhode Island solely by the |
14 | same taxpayer and where the personal property is located at, in, or adjacent to a generating |
15 | facility of the taxpayer in Rhode Island. The taxpayer shall procure an order from the director of |
16 | the department of environmental management certifying that the equipment and/or supplies as |
17 | used or consumed, qualify for the exemption under this subdivision. If any information relating to |
18 | secret processes or methods of manufacture, production, or treatment is disclosed to the |
19 | department of environmental management only to procure an order, and is a "trade secret" as |
20 | defined in § 28-21-10(b), it is not open to public inspection or publicly disclosed unless |
21 | disclosure is required under chapter 21 of title 28 or chapter 24.4 of title 23. |
22 | (38) Promotional and product literature of boat manufacturers. From the sale and from |
23 | the storage, use, or other consumption of promotional and product literature of boat |
24 | manufacturers shipped to points outside of Rhode Island that either: (i) Accompany the product |
25 | that is sold; (ii) Are shipped in bulk to out-of-state dealers for use in the sale of the product; or |
26 | (iii) Are mailed to customers at no charge. |
27 | (39) Food items paid for by food stamps. From the sale and from the storage, use, or |
28 | other consumption in this state of eligible food items payment for which is properly made to the |
29 | retailer in the form of U.S. government food stamps issued in accordance with the Food Stamp |
30 | Act of 1977, 7 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq. |
31 | (40) Transportation charges. From the sale or hiring of motor carriers as defined in § 39- |
32 | 12-2(l) to haul goods, when the contract or hiring cost is charged by a motor freight tariff filed |
33 | with the Rhode Island public utilities commission on the number of miles driven or by the |
34 | number of hours spent on the job. |
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1 | (41) Trade-in value of boats. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
2 | consumption in this state of so much of the purchase price paid for a new or used boat as is |
3 | allocated for a trade-in allowance on the boat of the buyer given in trade to the seller or of the |
4 | proceeds applicable only to the boat as are received from an insurance claim as a result of a stolen |
5 | or damaged boat, towards the purchase of a new or used boat by the buyer. |
6 | (42) Equipment used for research and development. From the sale and from the storage, |
7 | use, or other consumption of equipment to the extent used for research and development purposes |
8 | by a qualifying firm. For the purposes of this subsection, "qualifying firm" means a business for |
9 | which the use of research and development equipment is an integral part of its operation and |
10 | "equipment" means scientific equipment, computers, software, and related items. |
11 | (43) Coins. From the sale and from the other consumption in this state of coins having |
12 | numismatic or investment value. |
13 | (44) Farm structure construction materials. Lumber, hardware, and other materials used |
14 | in the new construction of farm structures, including production facilities such as, but not limited |
15 | to: farrowing sheds, free stall and stanchion barns, milking parlors, silos, poultry barns, laying |
16 | houses, fruit and vegetable storages, rooting cellars, propagation rooms, greenhouses, packing |
17 | rooms, machinery storage, seasonal farm worker housing, certified farm markets, bunker and |
18 | trench silos, feed storage sheds, and any other structures used in connection with commercial |
19 | farming. |
20 | (45) Telecommunications carrier access service. Carrier access service or |
21 | telecommunications service when purchased by a telecommunications company from another |
22 | telecommunications company to facilitate the provision of telecommunications service. |
23 | (46) Boats or vessels brought into the state exclusively for winter storage, maintenance, |
24 | repair, or sale. Notwithstanding the provisions of §§ 44-18-10, 44-18-11 and 44-18-20, the tax |
25 | imposed by § 44-18-20 is not applicable for the period commencing on the first day of October in |
26 | any year up to and including the 30th day of April next succeeding with respect to the use of any |
27 | boat or vessel within this state exclusively for purposes of: (i) Delivery of the vessel to a facility |
28 | in this state for storage, including dry storage and storage in water by means of apparatus |
29 | preventing ice damage to the hull, maintenance, or repair; (ii) The actual process of storage, |
30 | maintenance, or repair of the boat or vessel; or (iii) Storage for the purpose of selling the boat or |
31 | vessel. |
32 | (47) Jewelry display product. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
33 | consumption in this state of tangible personal property used to display any jewelry product; |
34 | provided that title to the jewelry display product is transferred by the jewelry manufacturer or |
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1 | seller and that the jewelry display product is shipped out of state for use solely outside the state |
2 | and is not returned to the jewelry manufacturer or seller. |
3 | (48) Boats or vessels generally. Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, the tax |
4 | imposed by §§ 44-18-20 and 44-18-18 shall not apply with respect to the sale and to the storage, |
5 | use, or other consumption in this state of any new or used boat. The exemption provided for in |
6 | this subdivision does not apply after October 1, 1993, unless prior to October 1, 1993, the federal |
7 | ten percent (10%) surcharge on luxury boats is repealed. |
8 | (49) Banks and regulated investment companies interstate toll-free calls. Notwithstanding |
9 | the provisions of this chapter, the tax imposed by this chapter does not apply to the furnishing of |
10 | interstate and international, toll-free terminating telecommunication service that is used directly |
11 | and exclusively by or for the benefit of an eligible company as defined in this subdivision; |
12 | provided that an eligible company employs on average during the calendar year no less than five |
13 | hundred (500) "full-time equivalent employees" as that term is defined in § 42-64.5-2. For |
14 | purposes of this section, an "eligible company" means a "regulated investment company" as that |
15 | term is defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. § 851, or a corporation to the |
16 | extent the service is provided, directly or indirectly, to or on behalf of a regulated investment |
17 | company, an employee benefit plan, a retirement plan or a pension plan, or a state-chartered bank. |
18 | (50) Mobile and manufactured homes generally. From the sale and from the storage, use, |
19 | or other consumption in this state of mobile and/or manufactured homes as defined and subject to |
20 | taxation pursuant to the provisions of chapter 44 of title 31. |
21 | (51) Manufacturing business reconstruction materials. |
22 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of lumber, |
23 | hardware, and other building materials used in the reconstruction of a manufacturing business |
24 | facility that suffers a disaster, as defined in this subdivision, in this state. "Disaster" means any |
25 | occurrence, natural or otherwise, that results in the destruction of sixty percent (60%) or more of |
26 | an operating manufacturing business facility within this state. "Disaster" does not include any |
27 | damage resulting from the willful act of the owner of the manufacturing business facility. |
28 | (ii) Manufacturing business facility includes, but is not limited to, the structures housing |
29 | the production and administrative facilities. |
30 | (iii) In the event a manufacturer has more than one manufacturing site in this state, the |
31 | sixty percent (60%) provision applies to the damages suffered at that one site. |
32 | (iv) To the extent that the costs of the reconstruction materials are reimbursed by |
33 | insurance, this exemption does not apply. |
34 | (52) Tangible personal property and supplies used in the processing or preparation of |
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1 | floral products and floral arrangements. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this |
2 | state of tangible personal property or supplies purchased by florists, garden centers, or other like |
3 | producers or vendors of flowers, plants, floral products, and natural and artificial floral |
4 | arrangements that are ultimately sold with flowers, plants, floral products, and natural and |
5 | artificial floral arrangements or are otherwise used in the decoration, fabrication, creation, |
6 | processing, or preparation of flowers, plants, floral products, or natural and artificial floral |
7 | arrangements, including descriptive labels, stickers, and cards affixed to the flower, plant, floral |
8 | product, or arrangement, artificial flowers, spray materials, floral paint and tint, plant shine, |
9 | flower food, insecticide, and fertilizers. |
10 | (53) Horse food products. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption |
11 | in this state of horse food products purchased by a person engaged in the business of the boarding |
12 | of horses. |
13 | (54) Non-motorized recreational vehicles sold to nonresidents. |
14 | (i) From the sale, subsequent to June 30, 2003, of a non-motorized recreational vehicle to |
15 | a bona fide nonresident of this state who does not register the non-motorized recreational vehicle |
16 | in this state, whether the sale or delivery of the non-motorized recreational vehicle is made in this |
17 | state or at the place of residence of the nonresident; provided that a non-motorized recreational |
18 | vehicle sold to a bona fide nonresident whose state of residence does not allow a like exemption |
19 | to its nonresidents is not exempt from the tax imposed under § 44-18-20; provided, further, that in |
20 | that event the bona fide nonresident pays a tax to Rhode Island on the sale at a rate equal to the |
21 | rate that would be imposed in his or her state of residence not to exceed the rate that would have |
22 | been imposed under § 44-18-20. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, a licensed, non- |
23 | motorized recreational vehicle dealer shall add and collect the tax required under this subdivision |
24 | and remit the tax to the tax administrator under the provisions of chapters 18 and 19 of this title. |
25 | Provided, that when a Rhode Island licensed, non-motorized recreational vehicle dealer is |
26 | required to add and collect the sales and use tax on the sale of a non-motorized recreational |
27 | vehicle to a bona fide nonresident as provided in this section, the dealer in computing the tax |
28 | takes into consideration the law of the state of the nonresident as it relates to the trade-in of motor |
29 | vehicles. |
30 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
31 | require any licensed, non-motorized recreational vehicle dealer to keep records of sales to bona |
32 | fide nonresidents as the tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the |
33 | exemption provided in this subdivision, including the affidavit of a licensed, non-motorized |
34 | recreational vehicle dealer that the purchaser of the non-motorized recreational vehicle was the |
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1 | holder of, and had in his or her possession a valid out-of-state non-motorized recreational vehicle |
2 | registration or a valid out-of-state driver's license. |
3 | (iii) Any nonresident who registers a non-motorized recreational vehicle in this state |
4 | within ninety (90) days of the date of its sale to him or her is deemed to have purchased the non- |
5 | motorized recreational vehicle for use, storage, or other consumption in this state, and is subject |
6 | to, and liable for, the use tax imposed under the provisions of § 44-18-20. |
7 | (iv) "Non-motorized recreational vehicle" means any portable dwelling designed and |
8 | constructed to be used as a temporary dwelling for travel, camping, recreational, and vacation use |
9 | that is eligible to be registered for highway use, including, but not limited to, "pick-up coaches" |
10 | or "pick-up campers," "travel trailers," and "tent trailers" as those terms are defined in chapter 1 |
11 | of title 31. |
12 | (55) Sprinkler and fire alarm systems in existing buildings. From the sale in this state of |
13 | sprinkler and fire alarm systems; emergency lighting and alarm systems; and the materials |
14 | necessary and attendant to the installation of those systems that are required in buildings and |
15 | occupancies existing therein in July 2003 in order to comply with any additional requirements for |
16 | such buildings arising directly from the enactment of the Comprehensive Fire Safety Act of 2003 |
17 | and that are not required by any other provision of law or ordinance or regulation adopted |
18 | pursuant to that act. The exemption provided in this subdivision shall expire on December 31, |
19 | 2008. |
20 | (56) Aircraft. Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, the tax imposed by §§ 44- |
21 | 18-18 and 44-18-20 shall not apply with respect to the sale and to the storage, use, or other |
22 | consumption in this state of any new or used aircraft or aircraft parts. |
23 | (57) Renewable energy products. Notwithstanding any other provisions of Rhode Island |
24 | general laws, the following products shall also be exempt from sales tax: solar photovoltaic |
25 | modules or panels, or any module or panel that generates electricity from light; solar thermal |
26 | collectors, including, but not limited to, those manufactured with flat glass plates, extruded |
27 | plastic, sheet metal, and/or evacuated tubes; geothermal heat pumps, including both water-to- |
28 | water and water-to-air type pumps; wind turbines; towers used to mount wind turbines if |
29 | specified by or sold by a wind turbine manufacturer; DC to AC inverters that interconnect with |
30 | utility power lines; and manufactured mounting racks and ballast pans for solar collector, module, |
31 | or panel installation. Not to include materials that could be fabricated into such racks; monitoring |
32 | and control equipment, if specified or supplied by a manufacturer of solar thermal, solar |
33 | photovoltaic, geothermal, or wind energy systems or if required by law or regulation for such |
34 | systems but not to include pumps, fans or plumbing or electrical fixtures unless shipped from the |
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1 | manufacturer affixed to, or an integral part of, another item specified on this list; and solar storage |
2 | tanks that are part of a solar domestic hot water system or a solar space heating system. If the tank |
3 | comes with an external heat exchanger it shall also be tax exempt, but a standard hot water tank is |
4 | not exempt from state sales tax. |
5 | (58) Returned property. The amount charged for property returned by customers upon |
6 | rescission of the contract of sale when the entire amount exclusive of handling charges paid for |
7 | the property is refunded in either cash or credit, and where the property is returned within one |
8 | hundred twenty (120) days from the date of delivery. |
9 | (59) Dietary supplements. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption |
10 | of dietary supplements as defined in § 44-18-7.1(l)(v), sold on prescriptions. |
11 | (60) Blood. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption of human |
12 | blood. |
13 | (61) Agricultural products for human consumption. From the sale and from the storage, |
14 | use, or other consumption of livestock and poultry of the kinds of products that ordinarily |
15 | constitute food for human consumption and of livestock of the kind the products of which |
16 | ordinarily constitute fibers for human use. |
17 | (62) Diesel emission control technology. From the sale and use of diesel retrofit |
18 | technology that is required by § 31-47.3-4. |
19 | (63) Feed for certain animals used in commercial farming. From the sale of feed for |
20 | animals as described in subsection (61) of this section. |
21 | (64) Alcoholic beverages. From the sale and storage, use, or other consumption in this |
22 | state by a Class A licensee of alcoholic beverages, as defined in § 44-18-7.1, excluding beer and |
23 | malt beverages; provided, further, notwithstanding § 6-13-1 or any other general or public law to |
24 | the contrary, alcoholic beverages, as defined in § 44-18-7.1, shall not be subject to minimum |
25 | markup. |
26 | (65) Seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients. From the sale, storage, use, |
27 | or other consumption in this state of seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients as |
28 | defined in § 44-18-7.1(l)(i). "Seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients" shall not |
29 | include marijuana seeds or plants. |
30 | SECTION 8. Chapter 44-49 of the General Laws entitled "Taxation of Marijuana and |
31 | Controlled Substances" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
32 | 44-49-17. No tax stamp required. |
33 | Controlled substance tax payment with a stamp or other official indicia, as referred to in § |
34 | 44-49-5, is not required for marijuana establishments and the penalties provided for in this |
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1 | chapter do not apply to those acting in accordance with the laws of and regulations enacted |
2 | through the authority of title 21. |
3 | SECTION 9. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- ADULT USE OF CANNABIS PILOT PROGRAM | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish a system for the regulation and taxation for adult use and |
2 | cultivation of marijuana. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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