Bill Establishes $500 Million Community Reinvestment Fund Aimed at Repairing Damage of War on Drugs
Washington, D.C. – Today, Representatives Barbara Lee (D-CA-13) and Ro Khanna (D-CA-17) introduced legislation that ends federal marijuana prohibition and which contains a range of provisions to repair communities most devastated by the war on drugs. Lee and Khanna are joined by co-sponsors Steven Cohen (D-TN-9), Bobby Rush (D-IL-1), Earl Blumenauer (D-OR-3), Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX-18), Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY-8), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Danny Davis (D-IL-7), and Jared Polis (D-CO-2).
“The current administration’s reckless approach to marijuana is showing us just how crucial it is for Congress to end federal prohibition and to ensure that communities most harmed by mass incarceration are not left behind,” says Queen Adesuyi, policy associate at the Drug Policy Alliance. “Marijuana legalization must be rooted in racial justice and equity. Any marijuana legalization proposal that fails to repair past harms, or that fails to provide for an equitable legal industry, is both negligent and tone deaf.”
The Marijuana Justice Act would:
- Remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act, ending federal prohibition of marijuana
- Cut federal funding for state law enforcement and prison construction if a state disproportionately arrests and/or incarcerates low-income individuals and/or people of color for marijuana offenses
- Allow entities to sue states that disproportionately arrest and/or incarcerate low-income individuals and/or people of color for marijuana offenses
- Prevent deportations of individuals for marijuana offenses
- Provide for a process of expungement for marijuana offenses at the federal level
- Provide for a process of resentencing for marijuana offenses at the federal level
- Create a “Community Reinvestment Fund” of $500 million to invest in communities most impacted by the war on drugs, for programs such as job training, reentry, community centers, and more. Part of the funding will come from the aforementioned cuts to state law enforcement and prison construction
“Persistent inequities in marijuana prohibition motivated California voters to pass Prop 64 in 2016, which not only legalized marijuana but also included social and racial justice provisions aimed at repairing the harms of racially disparate marijuana law enforcement,” said Laura Thomas, Interim State Director, California of the Drug Policy Alliance. “The Marijuana Justice Act would build on California’s gold standard for marijuana regulation by reversing the harms perpetuated by the war on drugs.”
Despite overwhelming bipartisan support for allowing states to set their own marijuana laws, the current administration continues to send threatening messages to states, as evidenced by the Department of Justice’s recent move to rescind the Cole Memorandum.
The evidence so far shows that legally regulating and controlling marijuana has enabled states to successfully set safety standards, restrict youth access, and enact regulations that limit the potential harms of marijuana use. States are choosing to stop wasting money enforcing petty marijuana offenses and to instead generate millions of dollars a year in tax revenues. Vermont is poised to become the first state to legalize marijuana through the state legislature in the coming days. New York, New Jersey and numerous other states have also introduced bills to legalize marijuana this year.
Eight states have legalized marijuana, and 29 states have approved medical marijuana. Nationally, support for marijuana legalization has reached 64% according to the most recent Gallup poll.
“Marijuana legalization in New Jersey must be fair and equitable and must include policies to repair past harms,” said Roseanne Scotti, New Jersey State Director of the Drug Policy Alliance. “Marijuana laws in New Jersey have disproportionately harmed communities of color. African Americans are three times more likely to be arrested for marijuana than whites even though both use marijuana at similar rates. Legislation to legalize marijuana in our state must include policies to right these wrongs. We welcome this new federal legislation, but with or without federal action, New Jersey will move forward with marijuana legalization rooted in racial and social justice.”
credit:themaven.net