Illinois marijuana law aims to undo harm of war on the drug
Source: Associated Press
Illinois marijuana law aims to undo harm of war on the drug
By JOHN O'CONNOR
November 2, 2019
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) When lawmakers crafted the law legalizing marijuana in Illinois, they tried to make sure it would right what many see as past wrongs linked to the drug.
In addition to expunging hundreds of thousands of criminal records for marijuana arrests and convictions, the laws architects added provisions meant to benefit communities that have been the most adversely affected by law enforcements efforts to combat the drug.
The so-called social equity provisions are expected to help black applicants, in particular, as blacks are nearly four times as likely as whites to be arrested for marijuana, the American Civil Liberties Union found. The law, which takes effect Jan. 1, also established ways for qualified applicants to pay lower licensing fees and get business loans and technical assistance. And it earmarked part of marijuana sales revenue for neighborhood development grants.
On the surface, its tone and what its trying to do is ahead of any state thats done this. Theyre really setting off in the right way, said Kayvan Khalatbari, a board member of Minority Cannabis Business Association, which has composed model laws outlining social equity programs. He added that follow-through will be key: We cant just set this in motion and set it free.
Companies that apply for a license to sell marijuana will be judged on a 250-point scale, and those that qualify as social equity applicants will get a 50-point bump.
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