fbpx
🌱 Legalize it?
x

Advertisement from The Incline

😍 Help us help you

We keep this newsletter free for readers, like you, thanks in part to revenue that comes from the ads you see here.

Place your message here to support The Incline

🌱 Legalize it?

The old Isabela’s building on Mount Washington is gone. | Tag #theinclinepgh to be featured in our Instagram of the Day.

5 things to know today

🗓 A program boosting unemployment checks in Pennsylvania has run out of money. It was supposed to last until December. (90.5 WESA)

➡️ Got an opinion on Oakland’s Christopher Columbus statue? There’s a virtual hearing at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, with public opinion expected to guide a final decision on whether the statue stays or goes. (TribLIVE)

🗣 A new Braddock mural is amplifying the search for a 22-year-old artist who’s been missing since December. (Pittsburgh City Paper)

🗺 Where does Allegheny County fit in Pennsylvania’s political landscape? Here’s a map and a statewide tour. (The Washington Post)

📈 Current COVID-19 totals: Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and the United States.

5 things to make you smile

🚨 Tako is coming to Bakery Square. (Tako on Instagram)

🍝 Why a spaghetti sandwich isn’t as strange as it sounds. (Pittsburgh City Paper)

🤗 They had us at “fat hummingbirds.” (TribLIVE)

🎭 No stage, no problem for these CMU drama students. (TribLIVE)

💛 Three cheers for the good Samaritan who helped a 90-year-old escape flooding on Banksville Road last year. (KDKA-TV)

💪 Like a gym membership for your brain

For less than the price of a gym membership to workout your bod, you can support local journalism that feeds the swol of your intellect.

For just $8 a month, you can join our membership community and help us help you keep reaching your #goals to #livelikeyoulivehere.

Gov. Tom Wolf is once again calling on lawmakers to legalize recreational marijuana in Pennsylvania. But what might that look like?

Going to pot

Let’s talk about marijuana. Specifically the governor’s push to legalize it here. He tweeted last week: “Tell your legislator to get a bill legalizing adult-use marijuana to my desk. I’d be happy to sign it into law.”

Pennsylvania is facing a multibillion-dollar budget shortfall this year, with widespread business closures and record job losses continuing alongside the pandemic.

How would recreational marijuana help? The governor wants to use legal pot revenue to bankroll COVID-19 relief and more. Pennsylvania’s own auditor general estimated that legal pot for adults (21 and older) would generate $580 million annually for Pennsylvania coffers. For context: Washington collected $319 million from legal pot sales in 2019 and Colorado collected $266 million — both states with much smaller populations than ours.

There is no doubt this is a bona fide cash crop — just look at the huge sums already being spent on medical marijuana here.

So, yes, legal pot would certainly help Pennsylvania financially this year or any year really — budget gaps are nothing new in Harrisburg. The option is also supported by a majority of Pennsylvanians.

But there’s another question we should be asking: What will or should legal pot look like in Pennsylvania?

Should Pennsylvania adopt a first-of-its-kind state-run system, like the one proposed here, with sales of legal pot happening in state-run stores, not third-party dispensaries? Should it get sales going more quickly by diverting a portion of its existing medical marijuana supply, like Michigan did? Should Pennsylvania allow marijuana users to grow their own (something a number of Pa. medical patients are already lobbying for given the high prices, spotty supply, and powerful corporate interests controlling the market)?

We asked Gov. Wolf’s office to share his vision for legalization. They said: “The governor looks forward to working with the legislature on details but has not presented any specifics or preferences regarding legalization.” (Leaders of the Republican-controlled legislature seem less excited, for the record.)

So, what do legalization advocates want? Paul Armentano, deputy director of NORML, gave us this list of priorities for new adult-use programs. It includes avoiding excessively high taxes, allowing homegrows for personal use, barring employers from firing or not hiring someone for off-the-job cannabis consumption, and “automatic reviews of past criminal records and for the expungement of those records” in cases where the underlying offense would no longer be a crime.

That last part is particularly important because the enforcement of existing marijuana laws results in around 20,000 arrests in the commonwealth each year. Advocates argue that flipping the legalization switch without addressing the consequences of criminalization would be both amoral and a dereliction of duty.

Gov. Wolf seems to agree. While he’s keeping an open mind on the mechanics of legalization, he says a recreational marijuana bill should include policies that “restore justice for individuals convicted of marijuana-related offenses.” He’s also said he wants to earmark revenue from legal pot sales for small-business grants, restorative justice programs, and more.

Those with low-level marijuana convictions can seek pardons from state officials right now without a fee.

But addressing prohibition’s legacy will be a lengthy effort without a recreational bill speeding that process up. And while the legalization discussion drags on, Black people in Pennsylvania remain three times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than white people.

What happens next — or at all — with legal marijuana is up to state lawmakers. But while previous efforts went nowhere, there is growing pressure on the financial front, courtesy of neighboring New Jersey. Advocates hope that pressure becomes a tipping point.

We’ll keep you posted.

Today

🍝 Learn to cook Italian at home with Chef Justin Melnick (Online

☁️ Join the push for cleaner air in Allegheny County with PennEnvironment's week of action — multiple dates (Online)

Tomorrow

🎸 Watch The Sooäär Trio collaborate with Estonian novelist and poet Kai Aareleid for this International Jazz Poetry Month performance (Online(Partner)

Wednesday

🎹 Explore Nat King Cole’s early works at this City of Asylum International Jazz Poetry Month concert (Online)   (Partner)

🚼 Learn what it’s like to work as a pediatric oncology and bone marrow transplant nurse at this Women in STEM Speaker Series event (Online)

🎓 Get answers to your questions about educating in a pandemic (Online)

Thursday

🔬 Join the 24th annual Carnegie Science Awards Celebration recognizing innovative leaders in Pittsburgh’s science, technology, and education fields (Online)

🌱 Join a virtual viewing of the film "Living Soil" and get your gardening questions answered by horticulture experts (Online)

Friday

🍿 Experience a drive-in like no other with the Carrie Blast Furnaces as your backdrop — multiple dates (Online

Saturday

🐌 Get your mollusk questions answered by everyone’s favorite malacologist and comedian, Tim Pearce, at this Carnegie Museum of Natural History-hosted Q&A (Online)

Sunday

🗯 Share stories, hear stories, and help inform a community's response to racism at this Local Voices event (Online)

One more thing …

The Steelers play their first game of the season today against the New York Giants in New Jersey. The game starts at 7:10 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN.

Thanks for reading to the end. We’ll see you back here tomorrow.

 

Archived Newsletters