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Missouri Democrats expect turnout boost from marijuana campaign, but split on policy itself

 Rep. Crystal Quade (D-Springfield), house minority leader, speaks to the media alongside Rep. Richard Brown (D-Kansas City) on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022, during the first day of the legislative session at the Missouri Statehouse in Jefferson City, Missouri.
Brian Munoz
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漏 2024 外网天堂
Rep. Crystal Quade (D-Springfield), house minority leader, speaks to the media alongside Rep. Richard Brown (D-Kansas City) on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022, during the first day of the legislative session at the Missouri Statehouse in Jefferson City, Missouri.

Nearly every day, Crystal Quade is somewhere in Missouri knocking on doors.

As Democratic leader in the Missouri House, Quade is hoping to help her party put a dent in the GOP supermajority that鈥檚 dominated the state legislature for more than a decade.

And when she heard the news earlier this month that a proposed constitutional amendment legalizing marijuana would appear on the November ballot, she thought her job might have just gotten a little easier.

鈥淚 definitely think that it will bring out more voters,鈥 Quade said of the marijuana proposal, which will appear on the ballot as Amendment 3. 鈥滻t will bring out younger voters, and traditionally, younger voters tend to vote Democratic. So that is looking like good news for us.鈥

But asked what she thinks of the policy laid out in Amendment 3, Quade鈥檚 enthusiasm dims.

鈥淚鈥檓 in support of legalization,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wish the initiative was better, but it is what we鈥檙e given to work with right now.鈥

Quade has concerns about the expungement provisions laid out in the amendment, as well as the fact that it will continue to allow the state to cap business licenses to grow and sell marijuana 鈥 a system she believes led to potential corruption in the medical marijuana program.

But even with those caveats, she鈥檚 a yes on Amendment 3.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a starting point,鈥 Quade said. 鈥淲e definitely will have to make improvements if this passes.鈥

Quade鈥檚 conundrum is not unique among Missouri Democratic leaders.

Support for legalization and heartburn about the amendment鈥檚 details have led to soul-searching among Democratic Party officials across the state. The consternation is particularly acute among Black Democratic leaders.

鈥淚鈥檓 a yes for legalization,鈥 St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones , 鈥渂ut upon further study, it looks like the devil is in the details鈥iterally and figuratively.鈥

Rosetta Okohson, Jones鈥 campaign manager, said the mayor remains concerned about a licensing system set up for medical marijuana that resulted in few successful applicants from Black and Brown communities. Since current license holders get first dibs on new recreational licenses, Okohson said Amendment 3 reinforces the inequity.

Beth Bell, right, the manager of Fresh Green, rings up a sale Wednesday at the Lee's Summit store which is the first medical marijuana dispensary to open in the Kansas City area.
Carlos Moreno/KCUR 89.3
Beth Bell, right, the manager of Fresh Green, rings up a sale Wednesday at the Lee's Summit store which is the first medical marijuana dispensary to open in the Kansas City area.

Jones also has concerns, Okohson said, about a provision that would be enshrined in the state constitution allowing police to issue citations for smoking marijuana in unapproved public areas, which critics have begun calling 鈥渟top and cite.鈥

鈥淲hen we are expanding police powers, and putting it in the constitution,鈥 Okohson said, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 always going to give Mayor Jones pause.鈥

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas said he鈥檚 still undecided about Amendment 3, though he is 鈥渓eaning yes.鈥

He agrees with Quade that having legalization on the ballot should help Democrats鈥 chances in the fall. And he understands the concerns about the medical marijuana licensing process.

But any electoral considerations or licensing issues are outweighed, Lucas said, by the possibility of making progress toward ending the 鈥渃olossal failure鈥 of America鈥檚 war on drugs that has been uniquely unjust in the Black community.

鈥淚 do want licenses to be more equitable. But I am not in the license game,鈥 Lucas said. 鈥淚鈥檓 in the caring about the 500,000 people in Kansas City game. And I don鈥檛 want them busted for a small amount of pot if they find themselves in any community in the state of Missouri.鈥

鈥楾he baseline鈥櫬

Amendment 3 asks voters whether to amend the Missouri Constitution to remove bans on marijuana sales, consumption and manufacturing for adults over 21 years old, with some caveats.

The amendment includes automatic expungement for certain people who have nonviolent marijuana-related offenses on their record. People who are still incarcerated would have to petition the courts to be released and have their records expunged.

It would create a regulated market where, just like for medical marijuana, the state would have the authority to cap the number of licenses it issues to grow and sell cannabis. Those with a current medical marijuana business license would be first in line to get recreational licenses.

In the current medical marijuana program, the state has issued around 200 dispensary and 65 cultivation licenses.

The amendment would also create a 鈥渕icro-licensing鈥 program that would be granted through a lottery process. Applicants must be a resident from a ZIP code with high marijuana incarceration rates or meet other such requirements.

State Rep. Ashley Bland-Manlove, a Kansas City Democrat and president of the Missouri Legislative Black Caucus.
Tim Bommel
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Missouri House
State Rep. Ashley Bland-Manlove, a Kansas City Democrat and president of the Missouri Legislative Black Caucus.

John Payne, campaign manager for Legal Missouri, the organization behind the legalization amendment, downplayed any electoral impact the amendment could have for either political party.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not really on our radar,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n other states that have had this on the ballot, it doesn鈥檛 seem to have a big effect on general turnout.鈥

When it comes to winning over voters, Payne said the expungement provision is probably the amendment鈥檚 top selling point.

鈥淭here are hundreds of thousands of people who have been arrested for marijuana possession in the state of Missouri in the last 30-40 years,鈥 Payne said. 鈥淎ll of them are going to be able to have those expunged as long as it鈥檚 not an offense involving violence, sale to minors or driving under the influence. That鈥檚 pretty life changing.鈥

Payne acknowledged many provisions in the amendment, including the expungement language, may not go far enough for some people. But he said the amendment should be seen for what it is 鈥 a starting point.

鈥淭his is the baseline,鈥 Payne said. 鈥淭his is not the final be all, end all on this subject.鈥

Criticism of other aspects of the proposal, such a provision allowing law enforcement to issue citations for public use of marijuana, are 鈥渂eing done in bad faith,鈥 Payne said.

鈥淚t is already illegal to consume marijuana in public,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to get charged with what you have on you, which would be a misdemeanor under state law at the very least.鈥

Payne said Amendment 3 makes illegal public consumption an infraction, subject to a civil penalty and a fine.

鈥淲e are reducing the penalty,鈥 he said.

But critics argue the goal of legalization should not be to reduce penalties. It should be to end them. And they fear enshrining a new infraction in the constitution will lead to further racial profiling and excessive use of force by law enforcement.

鈥淣obody wants to implement 鈥榮top and cite鈥 because we know that,鈥 said state Rep. Ashley Bland Manlove, a Kansas City Democrat and chair of the Missouri Legislative Black Caucus. 鈥淣ew York. Ferguson. Kansas City. We know that.鈥

Despite the criticism, including being denounced as 鈥渄eceitful鈥 by , proponents of the amendment 鈥 which includes groups like the ACLU of Missouri and St. Louis chapter of the NAACP 鈥 are optimistic about its chances this fall.

鈥淲e know there is still work to do,鈥 Payne said. 鈥淏ut we know that this is an issue that is supported by a solid majority of Missouri voters, so we鈥檙e feeling good about our odds going into November.鈥

FBI scrutiny

A Missouri court has taken the rare step of awarding medical marijuana licenses to an applicant after spotting irregularities in how the state evaluated the application.
Eric Schmid
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STLPR
A Missouri court has taken the rare step of awarding medical marijuana licenses to an applicant after spotting irregularities in how the state evaluated the application.

Reports of , as well as allegations that conflicts of interest within the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) and a private company hired to score applications, have fueled criticism of the medical marijuana program and .

With legalization on the horizon, the industry has also endured rumblings about federal law enforcement scrutiny, most recently in the closing weeks of the 2022 legislative session.

The FBI interviewed a handful of lawmakers and legislative staff about lobbying efforts related to a bill that would have legalized recreational use without license caps. The bill, which was opposed by the medical marijuana industry, cleared a pair of committees but before the legislature adjourned.

Among those interviewed by federal law enforcement were state Rep. Nick Schroer, a St. Charles County Republican who successfully added a poison-pill amendment to the marijuana legalization bill barring transgender women from accessing no-interest loans for women-owned cannabis businesses.

Schroer did not respond to requests for comment by The Independent.

Also interviewed was House Majority Leader Dean Plocher, who decided during the final weeks of the legislative session not to bring the legalization bill up for debate.

Plocher declined to comment about his conversation with the FBI.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 discuss private conversations with anybody,鈥 Plocher said. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 right to do.鈥

Asked if he spoke with any lobbyists about the legalization bill, Plocher said he heard from all sides of the issue, which he added was typical on nearly every bill that ends up on the House debate calendar.

The May interviews were just the latest example of law enforcement interest in Missouri鈥檚 marijuana industry.

In November 2019, turn over all records pertaining to medical marijuana license applications of four individuals by the following January.

Soon after, the state legislature convened, and in the weeks that followed, FBI agents began interviewing lawmakers, lobbyists and staff. Most questions , a lobbyist and close adviser to Gov. Mike Parson who represents numerous clients in the medical marijuana industry, including the Missouri Medical Cannabis Trade Association.

The department received in 2020.

All three subpoenas that DHSS has turned over to the media were redacted at the request of the federal government to obscure the records being sought by law enforcement.

In the summer of 2021, a Kansas businessman named Joseph Campbell was .

Campbell, who revealed the FBI questioning as part of a sworn deposition in a civil lawsuit unrelated to marijuana, was an investor in a company seeking licenses to cultivate and sell medical cannabis. Tilley served for a time as that company鈥檚 lobbyist.

Payne defended how Missouri has implemented medical marijuana, saying a tightly regulated program has avoided problems some states have seen, such as a growing black market.

鈥淚鈥檓 not gonna say that every single decision by the department was correct,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 obviously been times that I鈥檝e disagreed with things they鈥檝e done. But by and large, I think they have implemented a very successful program and it is a very competitive market.鈥

This story was originally published on the Rebecca Rivas contributed to this story. 

Jason Hancock is a reporter covering politics and policy for The Missouri Independent.