Ammons Wants Stronger Reforms In Cannabis Bill

State Representative Carol Ammons said during a recent interview it will be difficult for her to get behind a proposed bill to legalize cannabis without significant changes to the legislation. The Urbana Democrat said expungement for prior marijuana offenses is chief among her concerns. A summary of the legislation outlines an automatic expungement process for people arrested and convicted of cannabis crimes.

But the summary explicitly excludes individuals who were also charged with other offenses when they were arrested for cannabis crimes. Those individuals could separately petition the courts to have their records expunged, according to the summary.

Ammons said that’s not fair. She believes everyone regardless of what other crimes they may have been charged with should still be able to receive automatic expungement for cannabis offenses.

“If I have a marijuana charge, and I may have robbed a bank and they found a little marijuana on me, and they charged me with that up-charge. Take away the marijuana charge. I’ll still deal with the bank robbery,” she said.

The legislation also includes measures to increase equity and diversity in Illinois’ legal cannabis industry. But Ammons said the bill doesn’t go far enough.

“We are concerned about the inclusion of minority communities, black and brown communities, in this bill,” she said. “That is where we are right now.”

Ammons said she plans to raise her concerns about the legislation with Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Other lawmakers have voiced different concerns, including whether Illinoisans will be able to grow their own cannabis, and how the state plans to spend the revenue generated from taxing cannabis sales.

Story source: WILL