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With One Week Left, Medical Marijuana Progresses in Annapolis

Rachel Baye

A bill intended to diversify Maryland’s medical marijuana industry gained initial approval in the state Senate Monday night. The legislation is the state Legislative Black Caucus’s top priority in Annapolis this year.

The legislation makes several changes to the fledgling industry. Chief among them, it alters the make-up of the Medical Cannabis Commission, which oversees licenses to grow, process and dispense the drug.

It adds seven licenses to grow marijuana, and it creates a fund to help low-income residents access the drug.

Sen. Brian Feldman, a Montgomery County Democrat who presented the bill to his colleagues on the floor Monday night, said the legislation is the result of many compromises. He reminded senators to see the big picture.

“The goal here is not a fight about licensing,” Feldman said. “It’s about providing relief to the thousands of patients who want access to this product.”

African Americans make up about a third of the state’s population, but no African-American-owned firms won licenses to grow the drug. The Legislative Black Caucus has fought for two legislative sessions to change that.

The bill has already passed the House and is likely to get a final vote in the Senate in the coming days. But with just one week remaining in this year’s session, there could still be a fight ahead over variations between the two chambers’ bills.

Last year, a similar bill died in the final moments of the session.

Rachel Baye is a senior reporter and editor in WYPR's newsroom.
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