Pubdate: Wed, 28 Mar 2018 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2018 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IpIfHam4 Website: http://www.courant.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183 Author: Sandra Gomez-Aceves THIRD RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA BILL UP FOR HEARING INCLUDES SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, PREVENTION PROGRAMS A third committee held a public hearing on a third recreational marijuana bill Wednesday, despite a separate bill on the controversial issue facing bipartisan opposition last week. The legislation up for hearing in the appropriations committee Wednesday, H.B. 5394, calls for developing a plan for the legalization and regulation of cannabis. Unlike the two prior bills, the third seeks to provide substance abuse treatment, prevention, education and awareness programs. The bill would require the secretary of the Office of Policy and Management to work with the chief state's attorney and the commissioners of Mental Health and Addiction Services and Consumer Protection and Revenue Services to develop the legalization and regulation plan in "the most cost effective means." The completed plan would be due by Oct. 1 and it would then be submitted to the General Assembly. The bill has been met with some opposition. Deborah Schultz of Woodbury wrote to the committee that she found it ironic that the plan to legalize marijuana lies within the one sentence describing the purpose of the bill "while at the same time" providing substance abuse treatment and prevention programs. "The bill's own language attests to the fact that the passing of it will bring harm to our citizens. This is the height of immorality and is unconscionable," Schultz wrote. Donald Shubert, president of Connecticut Construction Industries Association, wrote the association was opposed to marijuana legalization "because the risks associated with legalizing marijuana and introducing a substance that can cause unquantifiable impairment in the construction industry far outweigh any intended benefits of this bill." Shubert said the legislation would leave employers responsible for inherently dangerous and imperceptible situations that they cannot control. During the hearing Sen. Cathy Osten, an appropriation committee co-chair, said an issue with regulating and legalizing marijuana is that while the state could enact legislation to prohibit employers from drug testing employees for cannabis and penalizing them, it would not include federal commercial drivers' licensing or other federal employees and jobs. "That is part of the problem because it does not lead us to come to a real resolution. We still have to work with the federal government on some of these issues," Osten said. Several advocates showed up to the Capitol for a third time Wednesday. The group of included Norman Plude, a man facing four felony charges and 60 years in prison for growing marijuana in his Seymour home, and Cody Roberts who said cannabis has saved his life on several occasions. "I am a father, moderate conservative, and registered Republican," Scott Hawkins, a resident of Hamden, wrote to the committee. "This bill will move our state forward in developing a comprehensive approach to the legalization and regulation of adult use cannabis." Hawkins argued the tax revenue from legal cannabis would assist Connecticut as it faces financial challenges and wrote that the legalization would allow law enforcement to place their resources on tackling the state's opioid epidemic. "The voters of this state have expressed a broad and deep readiness for legal marijuana," Hawkins wrote. Last week, the general law committee rejected the first bill that got a public hearing, H.B. 5458, by an 11 to 6 vote, with Republicans and Democrats joining to defeat the measure. The vote by the general law committee was considered the best chance for a legal marijuana bill to make it out of a legislative committee for consideration by the General Assembly. The second bill, S.B. 487, was raised by the judiciary committee and was backed by Senate President Pro Tem Martin Looney, who said the legislation was designed to encourage small business development and promote diversity. Looney said marijuana should be taxed and regulated like alcohol. The judiciary committee has not voted on the bill and has until April 4 to do so. However, no committee has voted in favor of legalization and the matter has failed during the past two years without any formal votes. "Here, before, there has not been a consensus sufficient to pass that legislation," said Gov. Dannel P. Malloy last week, when asked if he thought the recreational marijuana legislation would pass this year. "I haven't heard anyone ringing a bell and saying they have the votes." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt