Washington HB1614 Passes House

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Washington Lawmakers Approve Bill To Allow Home Cannabis Cultivation

A bill to allow Washington State adults to grow marijuana at home cleared its first legislative hurdle on Thursday, passing out of the House Regulated Substances and Gaming Committee on a 7–4 vote.

The proposal, HB 1614, would make it legal for people 21 and older to grow up to six plants for personal use, with a maximum of 15 per household. Plants would need to be labeled, grown out of public view and not “readily smelled” outside the premises.

Washington is one of only a few other states, along with Illinois and New Jersey, where commercial cannabis is legal but home cultivation by consumers remains prohibited—and it’s the only legal marijuana state where the practice is a felony.

The bill’s lead sponsor, Rep. Shelley Kloba (D), said before Thursday’s vote that the legislation “moves us toward an evolution where we can start looking at this plant as a plant.”

“It is legal to purchase products in the store, so it should also be legal to grow it at home with sensible sideboards,” she said.

Kloba also noted that the policy change was a specific recommendation of the state’s Social Equity in Cannabis Task Force, which in a December 2022 report called for the legalization of up to six plants per adult. The report further recommended reclassifying the cultivation of seven to 99 plants as a misdemeanor and vacating past cultivation convictions, though Kloba’s bill does not include those changes.

Thursday’s vote fell largely along party lines, winning approval from all six Democrats on the committee and a lone Republican, Rep. Kevin Waters. Another GOP member, Rep. Greg Cheney, said he’d intended to support the bill but decided to vote against it after Kloba withdrew an amendment that would have required marijuana be grown in locked areas that allow access only by an authorized person.

“I was prepared to vote yes on this bill with some of the safety mechanisms around the amendment,” he said. “Hopefully we can work with the sponsor around some of the security issues if it gets to the floor.”

As approved by the committee, no license would be necessary for adults to grow up to the six-plant limit. Each plant would need to be labeled with the grower’s name, date of birth and address, as well as when it was planted. Containers of more than one ounce of homegrown marijuana would need to be labeled with that information plus the date the cannabis was harvested.

The state already allows registered medical patients to grow six plants at home, or up to 15 with a health professional’s recommendation.

Landlords could prohibit homegrow by renters and lessees under the bill.

The legislation would make it a civil infraction, punishable by a fine of up to $500, if a minor uses or obtains a grower’s marijuana, unless the products were stored in a secured area or container. If a minor is involved in a DUI after consuming unsecured cannabis, the grower would face a fine of up to $750.

State marijuana regulators would have no responsibility or authority to enforce homegrow laws, although they could assist at another law enforcement agency’s request.

Washington State lawmakers have failed to legalize home marijuana cultivation despite a handful of bills being introduced as far back as 2015. Kloba, HB 1614’s lead sponsor, brought a similar bill in 2021 that also passed out of the Regulated Substances and Gaming Committee but then languished.

In an interview this week, Kloba told Marijuana Moment that she’s been working to find ways to secure more of her colleagues’ votes without alienating other members. She considered adding further restrictions to the bill, for example, to win support from law-and-order politicians, but worried those rules could rankle both small-government conservatives as well as progressives concerned about racial disparities in enforcement.

“It’s been a rollercoaster with this bill this year,” she said. The committee was scheduled to vote on the measure last week but held off because supporters weren’t sure they had enough votes.

Struggling to know how to proceed, Kloba said she’s even considered stripping back the new proposal and rerunning last year’s slightly simpler bill.

“My big motivation is: It’s not illegal to buy it; why should it be illegal to grow it?” she said.

Despite past bills’ failures, Kloba said she’s seeing signs that the landscape is changing. One of the proposal’s most stubborn opponents has been the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs, which has testified against home cultivation at virtually every opportunity.

At public comment on the bill earlier this month, the group’s deputy policy director, Taylor Gardner, said she’d still prefer that lawmakers keep cannabis “in a well regulated commercial setting.” But Gardner also gave recommendations for how lawmakers should regulate homegrow if they do ultimately decide to allow it.

Though it was a minor shift, Kloba saw the constructive comments as symbolic. “She really buried the lede,” the lawmaker said. “I thought that alone was significant.”

Kloba also acknowledged that regulators at the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (LCB), who in the past have expressed hesitance at legalizing home cultivation, have so far been quiet.

“They really have not weighed in on it,” she said, saying that may be because the bill specifically excludes LCB from enforcement responsibilities around homegrow.

The panel advanced two other cannabis-related bills at Thursday’s hearing. One, HB 1650, would allow local governments to enact bans on marijuana businesses only with voters’ approval. The other, HB 1822, would allow operators of short-term rentals, such as AirBnbs, to provide adult guests with small amounts of complimentary alcohol or cannabis.

Committee members also heard public comment on HB 1790, which would expand the state’s relatively new social equity program for cannabis business licenses.

Earlier this week, the same committee approved an amended measure that would allow Washington marijuana businesses to engage in interstate commerce once changes in federal cannabis policy allow it. A companion bill on the Senate side cleared its own committee hurdle last month.

Bills to promote social equity in the cannabis industry and provide employment protections for adults who use marijuana have also advanced through initial Senate committee votes this session.

Separately, state lawmakers are reconsidering drug possession penalties and related issues. Following a state Supreme Court decision in February 2021 that invalidated the state’s felony law against drug possession, lawmakers enacted a temporary criminalization policy that is set to expire on July 1.

HB 1614 - 2023-24

Per years past, the legislature cannot figure out how to get off that vice tax and does nothing of value. This is a bit old now (February) but this is the closest we've come to being comparable in policy to other legal states.
 
One of the things I hate about weed regulation is even though it may pass the state legislature it takes, sometimes years, before they actually implement it at county or city level.

IIRC, Washington DC passed medical weed but Congress decided they didn't want to listen to the locals and struck it down.
 
One of the things I hate about weed regulation is even though it may pass the state legislature it takes, sometimes years, before they actually implement it at county or city level.

IIRC, Washington DC passed medical weed but Congress decided they didn't want to listen to the locals and struck it down.
Luckily ours went into effect Jan 1 after the law passed the previous Nov. Those seeking to open new businesses had to wait a bit for guidance from the state and towns of course, but personal use/growing was right away.
 
Thats actually pretty good for how many you can grow. I have to pay for a med card in Oregon every year to have six budded plants. Well ten with my wife. You can have like 25 or something growing but only that many budded. Kind of dumb regulation. But you can grow a lot of bud with six plants. Thats awesome to see. More freedom!
 
this has got to affect the the big licenced growers and dispensary‘s big time.i think that’s great..the tides turning.this would b what you guys have been waiting for .licenced growers are going to lose the monopoly on it..
 
WA is all kinds of dumb with the regulation. When they legalized recreational, they gutted the medical program. Now the only benefit medical license holders get is that they don't have to pay taxes on the weed they buy at the dispensary. Growing as part of a co-op is no longer a thing either. One can get licensed to grow for patients, but they themselves cannot consume anything they produce, and are still limited to plant counts that are prohibitive of what some patients require for care.

The governor, for years, has said he will veto any bill because he's convinced allowing recreational grows will increase crime. This was the same man that signed a law decriminalizing all drugs and barring police from pursuing suspect vehicles except in extreme and very specific circumstances. Those moves obviously helped decrease crime. Not. I digress.

The whole messaging has been subtle but clear: they don't want to take a hit to the vice tax they make on every sale. The tax, IIRC, is something around 180% of the product price. So what this means is commercial growers have no incentive to grow top shelf product because at the end of the day the most they're going to make on an 8th is less than $10 while the dispensary is still going to sell it for $45. This has effectively pushed boutique shops and cannasseur quality producers out of the market because if anyone gives enough shits to do it right end to end, they get crushed in terms of profitability.

If these fuckers would get around to legalizing recreational growing, they'd quickly learn that most people aren't going to stop buying dispo weed. Most people will try to grow out of the novelty of it, and think they're gonna save money growing, then realize after time + energy + expenses they likely lost money because they won't be able to produce enough to make the math work their first, second, or even third grow. Then, they'll post their equipment on a public ad site, and take their whiny ass back down to the dispo and buy their bag of convenience. Meanwhile, those that can do the thing will continue as they always have and will be less stressed should they get caught. Right now it's a felony offense punishable up to five years in prison and a $10k fine.

Makes no damn sense. I can go buy all the shit to brew my own personal quantity of beer or wine, or even to distill my own spirits, or and here's the kicker, grow my own fucking tobacco but oh no. Can't legally grow weed. It's fucking asinine.

Alright, done with my rant.
 
I never thought of it like that on cost of growing..I see why smokers will still use the dispensary now..gee they have the laws up the shit lol.that’s pretty fucked on the licenced growers who help there patients can’t smoke.that’s just stupid.they will make the growers who helped patients feel like propper c$&ts if you said to your client I’m not helping you no more cause I can’t smoke it..I gather there would only b a small minority of licences growers that don’t smoke….farrk who’s going to know your not smoking it.spose the authorities will get the pigs to check in on you…
 
I never thought of it like that on cost of growing..I see why smokers will still use the dispensary now..gee they have the laws up the shit lol.that’s pretty fucked on the licenced growers who help there patients can’t smoke.that’s just stupid.they will make the growers who helped patients feel like propper c$&ts if you said to your client I’m not helping you no more cause I can’t smoke it..I gather there would only b a small minority of licences growers that don’t smoke….farrk who’s going to know your not smoking it.spose the authorities will get the pigs to check in on you…
Imagine if they told police officers they aren't allowed to drink alcohol: MASS PROTESTS. They abuse weed and everything around it because everyone still has a negative stigma about it and noone sticks up for cannabis. Legislation for weed is 99.99% of the time so horribly thought out and executed it really puts a dent in my confidence for the powers that be.
 
I never thought of it like that on cost of growing..I see why smokers will still use the dispensary now..gee they have the laws up the shit lol.that’s pretty fucked on the licenced growers who help there patients can’t smoke.that’s just stupid.they will make the growers who helped patients feel like propper c$&ts if you said to your client I’m not helping you no more cause I can’t smoke it..I gather there would only b a small minority of licences growers that don’t smoke….farrk who’s going to know your not smoking it.spose the authorities will get the pigs to check in on you…
yeah i've often wondered what kind of governance and oversight being a caregiver entails. i know they gather a shit ton of information about where the grow is happening, who has access to it, etc. IIRC children cannot be housed on the same property, either, because you know the reason for all the laws in the US is "WE'VE GOT TO PROTECT THE CHILDREN!!" which at this point is just a giant lever for whatever corporate agenda the biggest bank roll is pushing on any given day.

i know in some other states they require the grower keep all plants tagged with who's growing it, planting date, driver's license #, etc in case there is ever any police activity they can prove they're in compliance with the law.

imagine if we had sensical laws that made victimless crimes not crimes and trusted adults to be accountable and responsible for their own actions. that'd be a hell of a world to live in me thinks.
 
"Sensicle laws, responsible adults being accountable for their own actions" damn if only we have had these things for the past few thousand years. History has taught us that humans tend to create societes where the responsible adults coming up with sensical laws are executed by those who fear their power will be taken away from their grubby hands.
 
WA is all kinds of dumb with the regulation. When they legalized recreational, they gutted the medical program. Now the only benefit medical license holders get is that they don't have to pay taxes on the weed they buy at the dispensary. Growing as part of a co-op is no longer a thing either. One can get licensed to grow for patients, but they themselves cannot consume anything they produce, and are still limited to plant counts that are prohibitive of what some patients require for care.

The governor, for years, has said he will veto any bill because he's convinced allowing recreational grows will increase crime. This was the same man that signed a law decriminalizing all drugs and barring police from pursuing suspect vehicles except in extreme and very specific circumstances. Those moves obviously helped decrease crime. Not. I digress.

The whole messaging has been subtle but clear: they don't want to take a hit to the vice tax they make on every sale. The tax, IIRC, is something around 180% of the product price. So what this means is commercial growers have no incentive to grow top shelf product because at the end of the day the most they're going to make on an 8th is less than $10 while the dispensary is still going to sell it for $45. This has effectively pushed boutique shops and cannasseur quality producers out of the market because if anyone gives enough shits to do it right end to end, they get crushed in terms of profitability.

If these fuckers would get around to legalizing recreational growing, they'd quickly learn that most people aren't going to stop buying dispo weed. Most people will try to grow out of the novelty of it, and think they're gonna save money growing, then realize after time + energy + expenses they likely lost money because they won't be able to produce enough to make the math work their first, second, or even third grow. Then, they'll post their equipment on a public ad site, and take their whiny ass back down to the dispo and buy their bag of convenience. Meanwhile, those that can do the thing will continue as they always have and will be less stressed should they get caught. Right now it's a felony offense punishable up to five years in prison and a $10k fine.

Makes no damn sense. I can go buy all the shit to brew my own personal quantity of beer or wine, or even to distill my own spirits, or and here's the kicker, grow my own fucking tobacco but oh no. Can't legally grow weed. It's fucking asinine.

Alright, done with my rant.
Its not just there man.
NY legalized but still not legal to grow.
18 months after the first legal sale cause they gotta make that tax money. Dispensaries here are 57.99 an 8th then theres tax on top of that..... no way am i gonna pay 65 dollars for a mediocre 8th of weed.
Ill continue to illegally grow my own until the end of 2024 when its finally recreationally legal to grow at home. I could get a med card and be legal but i wont just give up my gun rights willingly.
Until the US federally legalizes it, every state is gonna have some ass backward laws on cannabis, and even when its fed legal its still gonna be state discretion i believe.
 
One of the things I hate about weed regulation is even though it may pass the state legislature it takes, sometimes years, before they actually implement it at county or city level.

IIRC, Washington DC passed medical weed but Congress decided they didn't want to listen to the locals and struck it down.
So much for majority rule
 
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