2019 -- H 6073 | |
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LC002450 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2019 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- THE EDWARD O. HAWKINS AND THOMAS C. | |
SLATER MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT--THE RHODE ISLAND MARIJUANA SOCIAL | |
EQUITY PROGRAM | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Williams, Craven, Slater, Vella-Wilkinson, and | |
Date Introduced: May 03, 2019 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Chapter 21-28.6 of the General Laws entitled "The Edward O. Hawkins and |
2 | Thomas C. Slater Medical Marijuana Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following |
3 | sections: |
4 | 21-28.6-18. Rhode Island marijuana social equity program -- Findings and purpose. |
5 | (a)(1) Marijuana prohibition has had a devastating impact on communities across Rhode |
6 | Island and across the United States. Persons convicted of a marijuana-related offense and their |
7 | families suffer the long-term consequences of prohibition. These individuals have a more difficult |
8 | time entering the newly created adult-use marijuana industries due, in part, to a lack of access to |
9 | capital, business space, technical support, and regulatory compliance assistance. In partial |
10 | recognition of this, the general assembly decriminalized possession of small amounts of |
11 | marijuana in 2013. Since 2006, medicinal use of marijuana has been permitted in Rhode Island. |
12 | (2) During the era of marijuana prohibition in Rhode Island, the burdens of arrests, |
13 | convictions, and long-term collateral consequences arising from a conviction related to marijuana |
14 | fell disproportionately on Black and Latinx people, even though people of all races used and sold |
15 | marijuana at nearly identical rates. A policy report issued by Open Doors in 2010 reported that in |
16 | 2008, people of color were arrested for possession of marijuana and sentenced to prison at a rate |
17 | eight (8) times higher than white persons. A report released by the American Civil Liberties |
18 | Union in 2013 found that in Rhode Island in the years 2001 through 2010, black persons were |
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1 | arrested for marijuana possession at a rate nearly three (3) times the rate of white persons. |
2 | Furthermore, a 2015 American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island report entitled "The School |
3 | to Prison Pipeline in Black and White", identified racial disparities in certain areas of public |
4 | interaction with the government specifically in areas of school discipline, racial profiling in traffic |
5 | stops, arrest rates, marijuana possession arrests rates and prison representation. The collateral |
6 | consequences associated with marijuana law violations, coupled with generational poverty and a |
7 | lack of access to resources, made it extraordinarily difficult for persons of color, especially those |
8 | with prior convictions, to enter the newly regulated marijuana industries. |
9 | (3) Offering technical support, regulatory compliance assistance, and assistance with |
10 | securing the capital necessary to begin a business in the emerging new marijuana industries will |
11 | help to reduce barriers to licensure and employment of persons of color who have been |
12 | disproportionately harmed by marijuana prohibition. |
13 | (4) Offering these supports will also aid the state in eliminating or reducing the illicit |
14 | marijuana market by bringing more people into the legal marketplace. |
15 | (5) It is the intent of this act to ensure that persons most harmed by marijuana |
16 | criminalization be offered assistance to enter the marijuana industries as entrepreneurs or as |
17 | employees with high quality and well-paying jobs. It is also the intent of this act to ensure that |
18 | barriers to persons of color who have been disproportionately harmed by marijuana prohibition |
19 | entering the marijuana industries are reduced or eliminated. |
20 | (b) As used in this chapter, the term "persons of color" means people who are: Citizens or |
21 | permanent residents of the United States and current residents of Rhode Island who are members |
22 | of any ethnic group included in the 2015 report conducted by the American Civil Liberties Union |
23 | of Rhode Island entitled "The School to Prison Pipeline in Black and White" as being negatively |
24 | affected by racial disparities in Rhode Island including persons who are: |
25 | (1) Black (a person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa); or |
26 | (2) Hispanic (a person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American, or |
27 | other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race); or |
28 | (3) Asian American (a person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far |
29 | East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands); or |
30 | (4) American Indian and Alaskan Native (a person having origins in any of the original |
31 | peoples of North America). |
32 | 21-28.6-19. Distribution of certificates and licenses. |
33 | (a) Notwithstanding any provisions of this chapter to the contrary, effective July 1, 2019, |
34 | and thereafter, the department of business regulation (the "department") shall implement policies |
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1 | to increase participation in the marijuana industry by people of color. Policies implemented |
2 | pursuant to this chapter shall pursue a goal of ensuring that half (1/2) of all new compassion |
3 | center registration certificates issued, including, but not limited to, certificates issued pursuant to |
4 | the provisions of § 21-28.6-12, are issued to persons of color. In promulgating these policies, the |
5 | department shall consider factors and goals identified in § 21-28.6-18(a), the summary and |
6 | conclusions reached in the 2015 American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island report entitled |
7 | "The School to Prison Pipeline in Black and White" and other factors designed to promote the |
8 | entry of persons of color into the marijuana industries. |
9 | (b) Notwithstanding any provisions of this chapter to the contrary, effective July 1, 2019, |
10 | and thereafter, the department shall implement policies to increase participation by people of |
11 | color in the marijuana cultivation industry. Policies implemented pursuant to this section shall |
12 | pursue a goal of ensuring that half (1/2) of all new cultivator licenses issued, including, but not |
13 | limited to, licenses issued pursuant to the provisions of § 21-28.6-16, are issued to persons of |
14 | color. In issuing these licenses, the department shall consider factors and goals identified in § 21- |
15 | 28.6-18(a), the conclusions reached in the 2015 American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island |
16 | report entitled "The School to Prison Pipeline in Black and White" and other factors designed to |
17 | promote the entry of persons of color into the marijuana industries. |
18 | (c) In issuing any certificate or license pertaining to the marijuana industries, the |
19 | department shall also consider the number of the persons of color who the applicant for the |
20 | certificate or license will employ under or pursuant to the certificate or license. The department |
21 | shall encourage applicants who commit to ensuring that at least a quarter (1/4) of their staff are |
22 | persons of color. |
23 | 21-28.6-20. Marijuana economic opportunity fund. |
24 | (a) Fund established. |
25 | (1) Effective July 1, 2019, there is hereby established a restricted receipt account entitled |
26 | the "marijuana economic opportunity fund" (the "fund"). |
27 | (b) Funding. |
28 | (1) Thirty percent (30%) of all monies and revenues generated by sales, licensure, fines, |
29 | taxes and fees charged pursuant to this chapter and any other provisions related to the marijuana |
30 | industries, and thirty percent (30%) of all monies collected as a fine for a violation of a law or |
31 | rule pertaining to marijuana, shall be deposited into the fund. The fund shall be administered by |
32 | the department of business regulation (the "department"). |
33 | (c) Distribution of fund. |
34 | (1) Eighty percent (80%) of the fund shall be used to provide interest free loans to |
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1 | persons of color who are seeking entry into the marijuana industries. Applicants for these loans |
2 | shall set forth in detail the proposed use of the funds and, if a loan is approved, the applicant shall |
3 | be required to use the funds in accordance with the applicant’s application. The approval process |
4 | for these loans shall be established by rules and regulations promulgated by the department. The |
5 | department shall provide assistance to persons of color in the completion of these loan |
6 | applications. |
7 | (2) Twenty percent (20%) of the fund shall be used to provide job training to assist |
8 | persons of color in gaining entrance into the marijuana industries. |
9 | 21-28.6-21. Social equity analysis – Finding and conclusions. |
10 | To facilitate greater equity in business ownership and employment in the marijuana |
11 | market, the department of business regulation (the "department") shall do all of the following: |
12 | (1) Serve as a point of contact for and to assist persons of color interested in gaining |
13 | access to the marijuana industries. |
14 | (2) To the extent feasible, assist and provide guidance to persons of color seeking to enter |
15 | the marijuana industries in regard to appearances before and dealings with local municipal |
16 | agencies, including, but not limited to, planning and zoning boards, and municipal governing |
17 | councils. |
18 | (3) On or before July 1, 2020, publish a social equity analysis of marijuana regulations |
19 | aimed at promoting equitable ownership and employment opportunities for persons of color in the |
20 | marijuana industries, in order to decrease disparities in life outcomes for marginalized |
21 | communities and to address the disproportionate impact of the war on drugs in those |
22 | communities, and especially upon persons of color. In preparing this analysis, the department |
23 | shall reach out to advocacy groups and experts who may include, but are not limited to, business |
24 | owners of color and entrepreneurs of color, organizations with expertise in addressing barriers to |
25 | employment and licensure for low-income communities or persons of color with prior arrests or |
26 | convictions, and unions representing marijuana workers. |
27 | SECTION 2. 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 -- THE EDWARD O. HAWKINS AND THOMAS C. | |
SLATER MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT--THE RHODE ISLAND MARIJUANA SOCIAL | |
EQUITY PROGRAM | |
*** | |
1 | This act would seek to remove barriers to persons of color or persons found to be |
2 | disproportionately impacted by marijuana prohibition from entering into the marijuana industries. |
3 | The act would ensure that a policy is implemented to promote an equitable distribution of licenses |
4 | and certificates related to these industries. The act would also establish a loan program, to be |
5 | administered by the department of business regulation, to assist persons of color or persons found |
6 | to be disproportionately impacted by marijuana prohibition to gain access into the marijuana |
7 | industries. |
8 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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