Politics & Government

Count State Rep. Kokoruda As a “No” On Legalizing Marijuana

Gov. Ned Lamont is supporting legalization of marijuana but Madison and Durham's state representative is not on board.

State Rep. Vin Candelora and Noreen Kokoruda
State Rep. Vin Candelora and Noreen Kokoruda (Kokoruda staff)

DURHAM, CT - It looks like proponents of recreational marijuana legalization are going to have to look for someone else besides Durham’s state House representative to get the necessary votes to get the bill passed.

Gov. Ned Lamont made it clear in his state-of-the-state address Wednesday that he believes the time has come for Connecticut to join the growing list of states to legalize recreational marijuana. Lamont, in his annual address to the General Assembly, made legalizing recreational marijuana a priority for this session even though he pushed sales off until 2022. Lamont’s budget funds positions in the Department of Consumer Protection to prepare for legal marijuana sales, but does not include any revenue from those sales.

And while Lamont had many supporters for his stance, one of them isn’t Madison-Durham GOP Rep. Noreen Kokoruda.

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Kokoruda, who has worked against the legalization of retail marijuana, said, "I continue to stand with the Madison Youth and Family Services Department in their opposition to the legalization of recreational marijuana.

“This is a matter of public safety for our kids that we should not take lightly or pass in haste just for extra revenue,” Kokoruda said.

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Lamont is asking for $275,362 in his budget adjustment to hire two permanent staffers and a project manager to get the regulatory framework in place for cannabis sales.

“Coordinated regional regulation is our best chance to protect public health by displacing illicit sellers with trusted providers,” Lamont said.

Lamont added: “Right now, what you can buy legally in Massachusetts could land you in prison for up to a year in Connecticut. We just marked the 100th anniversary of prohibition. How did that work out? The patchwork of cannabis and vaping laws are impossible to enforce.”

As part of his overall legislative proposals for 2020, Lamont is introducing “An Act Concerning Adult-Use Cannabis.”

His reason for introducing it: “Prohibiting the possession and sale of cannabis has produced a thriving illicit market and staggering racial disparities in the dispensation of justice,” Lamont said. Massachusetts, Maine, and Vermont already have some form of a market for adult-use recreational cannabis, and nearby states including New York, Rhode Island, and New Jersey are on track to legalize adult-use recreational cannabis in the near future.”

Lamont said the legislation was developed in careful partnership with the nearby states that have legalized.

He said it “protects public health by providing access to safe products, preventing advertising and retail locations that would appeal to children, and proactively updating the state’s indoor clean air act to protect children and other individuals from secondhand smoke.”

The proposed bill protects public safety by increasing the number of trained drug recognition experts in state and local police forces, updating traffic safety laws, reforming the administrative process that follows an impaired driving arrest, and freeing the state’s police, prosecutors, and other public safety officials to focus on more significant crimes, according to documents.

It will also promote “social justice by automatically erasing most cannabis possession convictions and empaneling an Equity Commission to develop proposals for how the individuals and communities that have borne the brunt of the war on drugs can benefit from the creation of the legal cannabis market. Finally, it sets up a fair tax structure that will provide meaningful new state and municipal revenues.”

Last year three different bills to legalize, regulate, and tax cannabis passed out of committee last year, but none of them received a vote in the House or the Senate.

Proponents of recreational marijuana have repeatedly argued that polls show the majority of the public in favor of legalizing marijuana. But those arguments haven’t been successful in convincing moderate Democrat legislators and any, single Republican legislator to jump over to the legalization side.

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