Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Marijuana Laws Change, But Exactly How Depends On Your State
It鈥檚 legal for people in New Mexico to possess recreational marijuana and grow those plants at home as of Tuesday, the same day regulators opened discussions on rules for the launch of pot sales next year. The milestone was celebrated by cannabis consumers and advocates for criminal justice reform who say poor and minority communities have been prosecuted disproportionately for using marijuana. Now, the scent of marijuana no longer is an adequate cause for searching vehicles and property in New Mexico. (Lee and Attanasio, 6/30)
With marijuana legalization in the Commonwealth right around the corner, there may be some confusion on what鈥檚 legal and what鈥檚 not. We鈥檒l break down the hot button questions we鈥檝e received since April 7 when Gov. Ralph Northam signed the bill, making Virginia the first Southern state to legalize marijuana. Here鈥檚 what you can expect with these new laws taking effect in Virginia on July 1. (Del Rosario, 6/29)
For years, Connecticut police chiefs and officers have fought strongly against legalizing recreational marijuana, saying they have no reliable test to prove that a motorist has been driving under the influence of the drug. Now, police are scrambling to review the complicated legislation and enforce the new law that takes effect Thursday with the start of the new fiscal year. (Keating, 6/29)
Earlier this year, New Jersey legalized and decriminalized marijuana, ending decades of prohibition. And now, with summer in full swing, you may be wondering: Can I finally smoke a joint down the shore legally? Well, not so fast. While Gov. Phil Murphy said that the state鈥檚 鈥渂roken and indefensible marijuana laws are no more鈥 back in February, there鈥檚 still a ways to go before New Jersey residents and shore-goers alike can light up completely carefree. (Vadala, 6/29)
The first marijuana dispensary in South Dakota history will open next week聽in Moody County. Members of the Flandreau Santiee Sioux Tribe announced Friday they have opened it's medical marijuana program, they're accepting applications for medical marijuana ID cards and they will open their聽first retail location and begin selling cannabis Thursday, the day medical marijuana becomes legal in South Dakota. (Sneve, 6/29)
In other news about marijuana 鈥
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas on Monday said that federal laws against the sale and cultivation of marijuana are inconsistent, making a national prohibition unnecessary. 鈥淎 prohibition on interstate use or cultivation of marijuana may no longer be necessary or proper to support the federal government鈥檚 piecemeal approach,鈥 Thomas, one of the court鈥檚 most conservative justices, wrote in a statement. (Constantino, 6/28)
Mexico鈥檚 president said he鈥檚 against the legal sale of marijuana, calling it 鈥渋mmoral,鈥 the day after the Supreme Court removed a ban against its recreational use. It鈥檚 the first time President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador made his views so clearly known, contradicting some members of his cabinet and his own legislators in Congress, who鈥檝e been working on a bill for months to create a cannabis industry. (Averbuch, 6/29)
In news about psychedelics and fentanyl 鈥
California on Tuesday moved another step closer to decriminalizing psychedelics 鈥 amid a debate over whether their prohibition is an outdated remnant of the War on Drugs 鈥 after the author removed a substance from the bill that opponents said can be used as a date-rape drug. The bill would allow those 21 and older to possess for personal use and 鈥渟ocial sharing鈥 psilocybin, the hallucinogenic component of so-called magic mushrooms. It also covers psilocyn, dimethyltryptamine (DMT), ibogaine, mescaline excluding peyote, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, often called ecstasy). (Thompson, 6/30)
Federal agents in this section of the southern border say they鈥檝e seen a staggering 4,000 percent increase in fentanyl seizures over the last three years. Those busts are not at ports of entry, where most smuggled drugs are typically found. The Border Patrol says the rising amount of fentanyl is being found in the desert 鈥 transported by increasingly brazen smugglers who are exploiting stretched federal resources. (Gutierrez and Henkel, 6/29)