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The Jockey, A Short Story by Charles Bukowski

Published
4 weeks agoon

By Charles Bukowski
Warming up Blue Mongoose on the backstretch before the last race, Larry Peterson noticed that the horse was really rank, almost spooked. Larry had been riding for 15 years and he knew his horses. This one really had a bug up its ass.
Larry tried to let the horse ease out of it, but at post time things weren’t any better. He rode up to the gate ahead of the other horses and found McKelvey. He told McKelvey, “This fucking beast is unfit. I want him scratched.”
“He looks all right to me,” McKelvey answered. Larry knew that McKelvey was one of those stewards who worried that the money the track lost on a scratch was a serious matter. The money loss was negligible, though, because the fools got their money back and bet it on something else.
Larry dismounted and gave the reins to McKelvey: “Get a feel of this skitterish motherfucker! See if you can hold him on the ground!”
McKelvey was a big fat guy, he grabbed the reins. Blue Mongoose bucked, rolled his head. The horse was in a lather.
“You son of a bitch, calm down!” McKelvey yelled at the horse. He yanked at the reins and swung the horse in a circle, then in another and then another.
“McKelvey, you’re only making him worse!”
McKelvey pulled the horse straight and glared at Peterson: “Nothing wrong with him, Larry! Either you mount up or I’m recommending they ground you five racing days for refusing to ride a fit mount!”
“You’re taking the food out of my mouth, McKelvey!”
“Ride or starve, boy!”
“Shit!”
Larry mounted. The crowd, not knowing anything, applauded. Blue Mongoose was the 8 horse. They had the first seven in. Mongoose wouldn’t enter his stall. Several of the gate men pushed at the horse’s rump until they got him in. The beast was quivering and snorting. When they placed the 9 horse into the stall next to him, that did it—Mongoose spooked, he reared high in the gate and dumped Larry loose and backwards, hard into the dirt. It was some bang but he was still conscious. He moved slowly, getting up. Then he walked around, limping, his right leg throbbing. He was dizzy and he had bitten his tongue.
Larry spit out some blood and there was the fat boy standing there looking at him. Larry said, “McKelvey, you son of a bitch, I hate every part of you!”
McKelvey gave the order and then the announcer came on over the public address system: “Ladies and Gentlemen, by order of the stewards, Blue Mongoose is scratched from this race. Your tickets will be refunded…”
Larry walked off the track and down through the tunnel.
A bad day, one third-place finish and four out of the money and one of them had been a 6 to 5 shot. Larry liked to run on or near the pace. Seemed like his agent never got him any early foot horses anymore.
He got to the the locker room, took off his tack. His valet was gone, the fucker had a hot date with a McDonald’s counter girl…
It was nice under the shower. Lance Griffith was a stall or two down—he’d finished second in the feature race with a 16 to 1 shot and was feeling pretty good.
“Hey, Larry!”
“Yeah?”
“Let’s go and get fucked tonight!”
“I’m a married man, Lance—”
“What the hell’s that got to do with it?
I am too!”
“I don’t play it that way—”
“Don’t be a fool, Larry, while we’re riding those horses, our old ladies are riding something else.”
“I don’t look at it that way—”
“You think they sleep with us because we scale in at a hundred fourteen? You’ve got some learning coming your way, man.”
“Listen, I just got thrown by my last mount. I don’t want to listen to a lot of shit.”
“Okay, Larry, okay.”
The right leg had stiffened, and driving in was painful.
Goddamn McKelvey, worried about the track take. That track would be there long after all of them were gone.
He pulled into the drive, got it into the garage, went up the steps to the door, opened it and Karina was on the telephone, all lovely six feet of her. Larry was like most of the other jocks: he liked tall women. Long hair. Class. College education.
“Reena, baby,” he said.
Karina glanced at Larry, waved an arm, mostly to motion him off. She was heavy into the phone.
“Yeah, mom, well, listen…you should take better care of yourself… You need more friends… Oh, I can tell when you’re down… I know your voice intonations… Listen, when are you coming to visit us? Everything’s lovely here… The trees are bearing fruit: tangerines, oranges, lemons… Larry and I love your company!… What? Oh, don’t be foolish! I mean it! Look, here’s Larry!”
Karina glanced at him, forcefully, said in a quiet voice: “Say hello to mama!”
Larry took the phone. “Hello, Stella… How you doing?… That’s good… Oh, I just got in… What? Oh, I’ve been riding… No, no winners today… Tomorrow maybe… Yes, oh, yes, it’s warm out here… Well, look, you be good now… Here’s Karina…”
He handed the phone to his wife. Then he walked across the room and up the stairway. He went into the bathroom and let the hot water run into the tub. The leg was really getting stiff.
Larry walked to the bedroom, took off his shoes and stockings. Then, sitting on the bed, he tried to get out of his pants. The right leg had stiffened. The pain was immense. He could hardly get his pants off. Struggling with it all, he laughed. It was so ridiculous. Then he had the pants off.
The undershirt and shorts were easier. He managed to get up. He took a few steps. The leg held up. He moved toward the bathroom. He got in there, bent over the tub, ran in some cold water and mixed it into the hot with his hand. As he was bent over the tub like that, Karina walked in.
“I think you were a little offhand with mom—”
“Reena, I didn’t mean to be. I just couldn’t think of anything to say—”
“You couldn’t? Well, you could try a little harder. Mother has feelings just like anybody else! That woman has been through a lot, she’s a brave and a wonderful woman.”
Larry stood up, looked at the bathroom wall behind the tub.
“Kid, I’m sure she is—”
“You really don’t mean that, you’re just saying that—”
“Well, hell, I don’t really know your mother.”
Larry managed to climb into the tub. The water seemed about right. He eased himself into the water. That hot water was so good on the leg…
“Well, you should make an effort to know her.”
Karina stood over him, so tall there, staring down at him. All that body. Those graceful legs. Some filly. And she knew how to dress. Style, class. Grooming.
That long hair. Red mixed with gold. And natural. Those green deep eyes. Those eyes that could laugh. And those perfect teeth. Nice nose, nice chin. Neck a bit long. But a good mind. And she knew how to dress. She had on his favorite, the dark blue dress that fit just right.
“I said, ‘You should make an effort to know her’!”
“Reena, I’m really beat—”
“Thinking of yourself. Always thinking of yourself, your goddamned self!”
“Goddamned self?”
“Don’t you think there’s anybody else around? Just you, the great jockey? And lately, the not-so-great jockey!”
“Reena, are you about to have your period?”
“No, are you? Are you about to have your period?”
Karina leaned over the tub, her hands resting on the edge, her gold red hair swirling down.
“Listen, babe, I’m sorry if—”
“Don’t babe me!”
Larry decided to give it up. There was nothing to say. Words would just lead to more ugliness.
Just peeking a bit he saw her smile and he thought, ah, it’s going to get better, the whole thing was some kind of joke.
But it wasn’t that kind of smile.
And then it left. And then he heard her again.
“So, now you’re withdrawing! You don’t want to talk to me!”
Larry splashed some water up under his chin, feeling quite foolish as he did so.
“Look, Reena, let’s forget everything and start all over. Let’s have a drink and ease off. Things aren’t that bad—”
Karina leaned closer. “A drink? A drink, a drink, a drink, a drink. A little drink…That solves everything, doesn’t it?”
“It helps-“
“Can’t you face anything without a drink?”
He knew what she wanted to hear and so he said it: “No.”
Karina reached angrily into the water and splashed a handful into his face: “You asshole! You idiot asshole!”
Her tears were coming. He felt ill in his stomach. He wanted to be anywhere but there. He wanted to be in jail, he wanted to be on skid row, he wanted to be lost in a desert, he wanted to be sucked away by quicksand.
“Just leave me alone,” he said.
Karina leaned closer. She no longer seemed as beautiful. “Leave you alone? Leave you alone? What for? So you can diddle with yourself? So you can play with yourself?”
“Yeah,” said Larry, “that. Let me have that—”
“Oh, oh…my God, that I’d have to end up with this!”
Larry looked at her: “I beg you, just get out of here and leave me alone!”
“Why did I have to marry a miniature man,” she began, “I could have—” and then a flash of roaring red fell upon him, and then darkness, and he grabbed her by the hair and then by the neck and pulled her into the tub with him.
There was the crash and splash of legs, elbows, dress, and she was in there. He was big enough to handle her, and he worked over on top of her as she kicked and flailed—he was used to handling 2,000 pounds of wild meat or whatever the hell those fuckers weighed. He felt his fingers digging into her mouth, her nostrils, against her forehead, and he pushed down hard, hard, and the head went under and he held it there, he held it down there, thinking, she’s silent now, but he couldn’t do it, he let her up, he got out of the tub, ashamed. He grabbed a towel, and put it about himself as Karina just sat there in the tub in her dark blue dress and put both of her hands up to her face and just sat there like that.
Larry felt horrible, demented, more than evil.
He walked into the bedroom, got into a robe. He sat in a chair by the bedroom window. Evening had gone into night. To the east he could see the lights of the city, they looked very peaceful.
Then he heard Karina getting out of the tub. It made a splashing sound. She coughed.
Then he heard her walking. He heard the water dripping as she walked. He felt her walking up behind him. He waited and looked at the lights of the city.
This article was originally published in the July 1983 issue of High Times Magazine.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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New York Officials Award First Round Of Grants To Help Marijuana Businesses With Startup Costs, Prioritizing Justice-Involved Licensees

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June 19, 2025
New York officials have announced the first round of grants under a $5 million program to help retail marijuana businesses owned by justice-involved people cover startup costs.
About three months after opening up applications for the Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) Grant Program, the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) and Empire State Development (ESD) announced on Wednesday that they have awarded 52 licensed dispensaries up to $30,000 each in funds meant for startup and operational costs such as rent, renovations, inventory tracking and security systems.
To qualify for the program, applicants need to have been “justice involved”—in other words, impacted by a marijuana-related conviction—and have some experience running a profitable business.
“These grants are about more than dollars and cents, they are about investing in the people and communities who are helping to build New York’s cannabis market the right way,” Felicia A.B. Reid, acting executive director of OCM, said in a press release.
“OCM is proud to support the development of cannabusinesses led by formerly justice-involved entrepreneurs,” she said. “Their work speaks to the incredible promise of business inclusivity and demonstrates what’s possible when equity is more than just a word—it’s a foundation.”
Applicants needed to submit at least $10,000 in eligible expenses in order to qualify for a grant, which could include costs starting from the date they received their final license notice from OCM.
“This funding is giving people entering the cannabis industry a bit of a leg up as they navigate an industry that is still very much in its infancy,” Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes (D) said. “This is also about social equity and reinvesting in communities, and I am very happy to see this funding going to communities across the state, and especially in my hometown of Buffalo.”
Sen. Jeremy Cooney (D), chair of the Senate Subcommittee on Cannabis, said that “throughout our efforts to build a thriving cannabis market in New York, we have never lost sight of the equity commitments we made when the MRTA was first passed.”
“The CAURD Grant program is an important step in this process, putting money directly in the hands of local dispensary owners to help grow their businesses and set them up for sustained success,” he said. “I want to congratulate the first round of awardees, and I look forward to our ongoing work to support these entrepreneurs.”
Meanwhile, OCM recently launched a new online map that’s meant to help adults locate licensed marijuana retailers—one of their latest efforts to encourage consumers to buy their cannabis from the regulated market.
After a rocky rollout of the state’s legalization law opened the door to a proliferation of illicit marijuana shops, the governor and regulators have prioritized educating the public about the need to purchase their products from licensed dispensaries as a health and safety imperative.
The broader New York campaign has also involved digital ads and educational resources, including a guide on safe consumption practices, as well as graphics and videos featuring licensed cannabis business owners and messaging about the benefits of participating in the regulated market.
OCM also advises that “continued enforcement against the illicit market is critical to building a health regulated market,” pointing to what it describes as successful enforcement efforts in 2024. Last spring, for example, officials in New York City launched Operation Padlock, an enforcement initiative meant to shutter illegal storefronts. Within months, licensed shops that were open before the operation began saw sales climb 105 percent, according to an OCM survey.
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Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.
Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.
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Meanwhile, in New York, regulators are moving forward with new proposed regulations around the state’s so-called “cannabis showcase” program, which allows licensed businesses to sell to consumers at pop-up, farmers market-like events.
As originally authorized, the showcase events were largely in response to the slow rollout of New York’s adult-use marijuana program, which faced multiple delays in implementation amid litigation and other matters.
But the state’s industry has gradually expanded, with officials in January touting $1 billion in total sales since the market launched.
Separately in New York, Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed state budget legislation that did not include a controversial earlier provision that would have allowed police to use the smell of marijuana as probable cause that a driver is impaired and then force them to take a drug test.
Amendments made in the legislature removed the provision, which a coalition of 60 reform groups had argued in a letter to Hochul and top lawmakers would “repeat some of the worst harms of the War on Drugs” and allow law enforcement to “restart unconstitutional racial profiling of drivers.”
Meanwhile, a recent OCM report said the number of licensed marijuana retailers in the state grew by nearly threefold last year, fueling total sales in 2024 of nearly $870 million.
Including sales so far in 2025, New York’s legal cannabis market is now close to reaching $1.5 billion worth of purchases, OCM said in April.
Also that month, New York cannabis regulators and labor officials announced the launch of a workforce training program aimed at “providing comprehensive safety education to workers” in the state’s legal marijuana industry.
Separately, OCM’s press secretary recently indicated the office is working on plans to expand permitting and licensing rules that could allow adults to buy and consume marijuana at movie theaters. Authorizing sales of cannabis products at theaters would set New York apart as it continues to build upon the state’s legalization law.
Also, earlier this year, a collective of businesses licensed under the CAURD program called on Hochul to forgive tens of millions of dollars in high-cost loans issued under a governor-created social equity loan fund.
Peoples-Stokes said in December that there’s a need to extend financial aid to CAURD license holders, many of whom are struggling under the high-cost loans.
Critics—including the NAACP New York State Conference, Black Cannabis Industry Association, Minority Cannabis Business Association, Service Disabled Veterans in Cannabis Association, Drug Policy Alliance, NYC NORML and VOCAL-NY—wrote to the governor earlier that month to express dismay at what they described as marijuana regulators’ “efforts in service of big corporations at the expense of small business and equity outcomes.”
Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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New Hampshire Lawmakers Advance Psilocybin Penalty Reform But Reject Medical Marijuana Homegrow

Published
2 hours agoon
June 19, 2025
As lawmakers in New Hampshire work to reconcile different versions of bills passed by the House and Senate this session, one conference committee on Wednesday agreed to move forward with a plan to reduce penalties for psilocybin possession while a separate panel rejected a proposal to allow medical marijuana patients to grow cannabis at home.
Both proposals had support from House lawmakers, but—with the exception of the newly advancing psilocybin provision—the Senate has broadly stood in the way of drug reform measures.
Regarding psilocybin, members of a bicameral conference committee voted to advance a compromise version of SB 14, which contains both mandatory minimum sentences around fentanyl as well as the lower penalty for possessing the psychedelic.
As passed by the Senate, the bill would have established mandatory minimum sentences for certain fentanyl offenses. But a House committee last month added language to reduce the penalty for psilocybin, making it a misdemeanor rather than a felony to possess up to 3/4 of an ounce of the psychedelic—at least on the first offense.
One member of the conference committee, Sen. Daryl Abbas (R), emphasized that the reform would apply to first psilocybin possession offenses only.
“Any subsequent offense after the first would still be a felony offense,” he said at Wednesday’s hearing.
Abbas added that the first possession penalty would be an unclassified misdemeanor, meaning prosecutors would have discretion to charge the conduct as either a Class A or Class B misdemeanor, the latter of which does not include jail time.
The measure does not go as far as a separate standalone psilocybin decriminalization bill—HB 528, from Rep. Kevin Verville (R), which would have made a first offense a $100 violation—but it would still end the state’s felony law against simple possession.
The Senate earlier this session rejected Verville’s broader psilocybin decriminalization proposal after passage by the House, but he and others have held out hope for more moderate reform in SB 14.
“We’re not decriminalizing anything,” Verville said Wednesday at the conference committee hearing. “On the psilocybin side, all we are doing is some penalty reform for a first offense.”
He called psilocybin “essentially non-toxic,” saying the average person would need to eat more than 20 pounds of psilocybin mushrooms to risk a lethal dose. “The other thing is, psilocybin is not habit forming. It is not addictive.”
Verville said after House passage of the revised bill earlier this month that while he isn’t a fan of mandatory minimum sentences, SB 14’s proposed penalties around fentanyl “are fairly short sentences for felony crimes,” describing the overall bill as “an excellent trade that is for the greater benefit of the citizens of New Hampshire.”
The proposed fentanyl penalties would affect manufacturing, selling, transporting or possession with the intent to sell. Those activities involving 20 or more grams would carry a 3 1/2 year mandatory minimum prison sentence, while 50 or more grams would mean at least seven years behind bars.
Earlier this week, it briefly appeared the conference committee had given up on the fentanyl and psilocybin bill. Members on Monday declined to move forward with the compromise.
“Unfortunately, the Senate position on psilocybin was clear earlier this year, and we are not going to agree to that part of the bill,” committee member Sen. Bill Gannon (R) told lawmakers on the House side, “which I think kills it for you guys.”
“Hate to waste your time here,” Gannon added at the time, noting that he appreciated the work Rep. Terry Roy (R) had put into the legislation regarding mandatory minimums on fentanyl.
“You know what? That’s OK,” Roy replied. “We’ll be back in the fall and we can look at it again.”
Since that hearing, however, legislative leaders replaced some members of the panel, which appears to have sped a resolution.
The revised SB 14 now proceeds to both legislative chambers for approval before potentially heading to Gov. Kelly Ayotte (R).
As for home cultivation of medical marijuana by patients and caregivers, a separate conference committee that heard SB 118—which primarily deals with nursing homes in the state—voted earlier Wednesday to move forward with a version of the bill that does not contain the cannabis provision added by the House.
“The House conferees have discussed this, and at least three out of the four of us have decided to accede to the Senate position and support the removal of the cannabis [provision] from SB 118 and leave the rest of the bill intact,” said Rep. Wayne MacDonald (R), a member of the panel and chair of the House Health and Human Services Committee.
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Rep. Laura Telerski (D), who last week replaced an earlier House member of the panel, expressed disappointment at the move and said she would ask to be replaced on the conference committee.
“I was a part of this committee to hopefully have discussion and defend the House position, which included the therapeutic home growth for cannabis,” she said, adding that home cultivation would expand accessibility and reduce costs for patients. “Unfortunately, I will not be able to support the agreement by this committee, and I will be requesting to be replaced.”
Other members of the conference committee moved ahead with the modified proposal, accepting a House compromise plan minus the cannabis homegrow provision. The agreement will now go to both legislative chambers for their approval.
SB 118 didn’t originally contain the cannabis language, but earlier in the session—following the Senate’s tabling of HB 53, a separate homegrow bill that senators had previously tabled—a House committee had amended the bill to add language from the standalone bill.
So far this session, the Senate has been broadly hostile to drug reform proposals. While a number of bills have cleared the House of Representatives—including a renewed effort to legalize adult-use marijuana—nearly all have gone on to die in the Senate.
“These outcomes are disappointing, but unfortunately, they aren’t surprising,” Matt Simon, director of public and government relations at the medical marijuana provider GraniteLeaf Cannabis, told Marijuana Moment last month.
Earlier in the year, Simon said it appeared “that a few senators just want to kill every bill that deals with cannabis policy, no matter how modest and non-controversial”—an observation that’s largely held true.
As for broader cannabis legalization, the Senate in early May narrowly voted to table a House-passed marijuana legalization bill, effectively ending this year’s effort to end cannabis prohibition in the “Live Free or Die” state.
The chamber voted 12–10 to table the measure, HB 198, from Rep. Jared Sullivan (D). It had previously passed the House of Representatives in March, but weeks later the Senate Judiciary Committee recommended the proposal be rejected.
If enacted, the bill would have legalized noncommercial possession and use of marijuana among adults 21 and older, permitting adults to have up to two ounces of marijuana flower, 10 grams of concentrate and up to 2,000 milligrams of THC in other cannabis products.
Sullivan’s proposal was a pared-down version of a legalization measure lawmakers nearly passed last year, under then-Gov. Chris Sununu (R), but it did not include that bill’s regulated commercial system—a controversial issue that ultimately derailed the earlier effort.
Recent state polling suggests New Hampshire residents strongly favor cannabis legalization. In late April, a Granite State Poll, from the University of New Hampshire’s States of Opinion Project, found 70 percent support for the reform, including majorities of Democrats, Republicans and independents.
“Support for legalization has increased slightly since June 2024 (65%) and remains considerably higher than in the mid-2010s,” it added. “Majorities of Democrats (84%), independents (72%), and Republicans (55%) support legalizing marijuana for personal use.”
Last legislative session, New Hampshire lawmakers nearly passed a bill that would have legalized and regulated marijuana for adults—a proposal that then-Gov. Chris Sununu (R) had indicated he’d support. But infighting over how the market would be set up ultimately scuttled that measure. House Democrats narrowly voted to table it at the last minute, taking issue with the proposal’s state-controlled franchise model, which would have given the state unprecedented sway over retail stores and consumer prices.
Image element courtesy of Kristie Gianopulos.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Maryland Governor Marks Juneteenth With Another Mass Marijuana Pardon For Nearly 7,000 People

Published
3 hours agoon
June 19, 2025
The governor of Maryland has issued another mass pardon for people with past marijuana possession convictions, granting clemency to about 7,000 more people on the holiday Juneteenth that commemorates the end of slavery.
Gov. Wes Moore (D) has been one of the most proactive governors when it comes to cannabis pardons since his state enacted legalization, stressing the need to right the wrongs of prohibition through executive action.
This latest round follows a historic mass clemency action Moore took last year, when he pardoned more than 175,000 convictions for low-level cannabis and paraphernalia offenses.
The governor’s new executive order, which he signed at the Bethel AME Church on Thursday, covers 6,938 people who the state judiciary didn’t identify in the initial round due to technical complications.
“These cases were not included in the initial pardon because they were coded incorrectly, and thus, were not found in the Judiciary’s initial searches of their data,” a spokesperson for the governor’s office said. “The Judiciary recently located these cases when researching their data to determine how best to implement the Expungement Reform Act.”
In a video posted on Facebook on Thursday, the governor said “Juneteenth reminds us of the shoulders we stand on—and our responsibility to hand off this country better than we found it.”
He didn’t describe the latest executive order, but he added that he was “proud to issue the largest state pardon in our nation’s history—pardoning 175,000 Maryland convictions for cannabis possession” last year.
In a separate interview with TheGrio, Moore said the “deeply complicated” history of his state and of the country is a motivator to act on reform.
“The history and inequity of this country—it runs deep,” he said. “That should also serve as fuel and motivation—as an understanding of why we can’t wait. Why we need action.”
“Even after Maryland legalized and made a recreational cannabis market, I had people in my state who could not get a barber’s license or could not get a student loan, or couldn’t get a home loan because of a misdemeanor cannabis conviction that took place in the 1980s,” Moore said.
“As chief executive, as a governor, I have the authority to be able to right so many of these historical wrongs, knowing that these pardons are going to have a disproportionate impact on African Americans, because the impact that we’ve seen on this war has been a war oftentimes on Black communities.”
Adrian Rocha, policy director for the Last Prisoner Project, praised Moore’s latest action, saying it affirms a “commitment to his promise to build a state and society that is more equitable, more just and leaves no one behind.”
“States across the country should be emboldened to follow Moore’s lead,” he said.
In February, the governor also touted in his State of the State address legislation that would expand opportunities for people to have their criminal records for marijuana expunged, allowing people who violated terms of their parole or probation to petition courts to erase those records.
—
Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.
Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.
—
Meanwhile, in April, Moore signed a series of cannabis bills, including one that will require state officials to automatically shield records for low-level marijuana convictions that have been pardoned from public access, and to more broadly expand expungement eligibility for certain other offenses.
He further signed off on legislation that will allow adults to manufacture marijuana edibles and concentrates for personal use, as well as a measure dealing with rules around cannabis consumption lounges.
Separately, the Maryland Senate also passed a measure this session to protect for fire and rescue workers from being penalized for off-duty use of medical marijuana, though it did not advance through the House.
Employers could not “discipline, discharge, or otherwise discriminate against the fire and rescue public safety employee with respect to the employee’s compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment” based solely on a positive screening for THC metabolites under the legislation.
In January, officials in Maryland’s most populous county separately said they were moving to loosen marijuana policies for would-be police officers in an effort to boost recruitment amid a staffing shortage.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
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