The latest place to legalize marijuana in the U.S. isn’t a state. It’s the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI).
As reported by Forbes, under the new law signed by Gov. Ralph Torres (R), adults over 21 years of age will be able to legally possess up to one ounce of marijuana, as well as infused products and extracts. Regulators will begin to issue licenses for cannabis producers, testing facilities, processors, retailers, wholesalers, and lounges. Home cultivation of a small number of plants will also be allowed.
A U.S. First
CNMI, a tiny Pacific territory with a population of just over 50,000, is the first place in the U.S. to launch a commercial cannabis legalization system through an act of lawmakers. As opposed to most states that have passed cannabis legalization laws with a ballot initiative vote. Vermont legislators passed a bill to end marijuana prohibition this year, but it only allows for possession and home cultivation, not legal sales.
The territory is also the first U.S. jurisdiction to go from having cannabis totally illegal to allowing recreational use without first having a medical marijuana program.
“Together, we are telling the world that we do not feel that our citizens should be stigmatized and criminalized for the responsible adult use of cannabis and that they should no longer be denied access to this life-saving medicine,” said Lawerence J. Duponcheel, co-founder of the advocacy group Sensible CNMI.
After a series of back-and-forth moves between CNMI’s House and Senate earlier this year, lawmakers finally sent the cannabis bill to Torres’s desk last month.
Uncertain Fate
Having previously expressed concerns about public safety, it was unclear if the governor was going to sign or veto the legislation, but in the end, Torres decided to hold a signing ceremony to highlight his decision.
“Today, our people made history. We took a stand to legalize marijuana in the CNMI for recreational, medical, and commercial use,” Torres said in a statement.
While signing the overall bill into law, Torres did use his line-item veto powers to cancel some provisions of the proposal, including one to allow a government entity to be licensed to grow cannabis, as well as a provision requiring recreational marijuana consumers to obtain $5 permits.
Growing Momentum
Legalization supporters hope that the tiny territory’s move will have big implications for the rest of the country.
“This is the first legislatively enacted law in the U.S. that taxes and regulates marijuana for adults' use, but it will be far from the last,” Karen O’Keefe, state policies director for the Marijuana Policy Project, said in an interview. “New Jersey could follow suit within weeks, and as many as five more state legislatures could do so within the next year. Public support for legalizing marijuana is strong and growing, and elected officials are increasingly getting the message.”
Others advocates believe the building momentum will add to pressure on the federal government to modernize its approach to cannabis.
"The leadership and common sense displayed by the elected officials of CNMI is yet another pivotal crack in the wall of prohibition," NORML Political Director Justin Strekal said. "It’s time for Congress to take note of this new historic event and move to allow states and territories to set their own policies by removing cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act."
Voters in several states will consider marijuana questions in November. Michigan and North Dakota, for example, have recreational legalization measures on their ballots, while Missouri and Utah will decide on medical cannabis proposals.
Meanwhile, Torres and other officials will get to work appointing a regulatory commission to implement CNMI’s new legalization law.