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Video: NCIA Today – August 20, 2021

Video: NCIA Today – July 30, 2021

NCIA Deputy Director of Communications Bethany Moore checks in with what’s going on across the country with the National Cannabis Industry Association’s membership, board, allies, and staff. Join us every Friday here on Facebook for NCIA Today Live.

Video: NCIA Today – June 25, 2021

NCIA Deputy Director of Communications Bethany Moore checks in with what’s going on across the country with the National Cannabis Industry Association’s membership, board, allies, and staff. Join us every Friday here on Facebook for NCIA Today Live.

Video: NCIA Today – April 2, 2021

NCIA Deputy Director of Communications Bethany Moore checks in with what’s going on across the country with the National Cannabis Industry Association’s membership, board, allies, and staff. Join us every Friday on Facebook for NCIA Today Live.

 

MORE Act Headed For Vote, SAFE Banking Still In Play

by Morgan Fox, NCIA’s Director of Media Relations

We asked, you answered, and your efforts are seeing results!

Over the past months, our Government Relations team in Washington, D.C. has been hard at work gathering support in Congress for the Marijuana Opportunity, Reinvestment, and Expungement (MORE) Act, and many of our members responded to the call to contact their lawmakers to urge them to support the legislation and bring it to a floor vote in the House. Well, our mutual work is paying off!

Last week, House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-SC) announced that the MORE Act would be called for the vote! This was confirmed Monday as taking place during the week of September 21.

This legislation would remove cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act and do away with the continuing conflict between states with modern cannabis laws and the federal government. It would also expunge federal cannabis convictions, remove barriers to research, eliminate the current problems with the 280E tax code and lack of access to banking, promote more diverse participation in the cannabis industry, and establish funds to help undo the disparate harms caused by prohibition.

Make no mistake: this vote will be historic. This will be the first time that a bill to end cannabis prohibition has come up for a full vote in either chamber of Congress, and the results of the vote could determine the path of cannabis policy reform efforts for years to come.

This means we have just three weeks to drum up as much support as possible and show our elected officials where the vast majority of Americans stand on cannabis.

If your representatives are not among the 87 current cosponsors of the MORE Act, please contact them and urge them to join in showing their support for this momentous and necessary bill.

CONTACT CONGRESS NOW

 

Meanwhile, our efforts to maintain momentum for cannabis banking reform have continued throughout the negotiations of the next pandemic relief bill. Despite a somewhat contentious public debate over the size and scope of the stimulus funds in general, hope is still alive for the SAFE Banking Act provision to be included in the final legislation if Congress can come to some agreements on the numerous other issues at stake.

What is not up for debate is that SAFE Banking is an absolutely necessary part of COVID-19 relief. This measure will improve public health and safety by enabling more social distancing and decreasing cannabis businesses’ reliance on cash transactions which can spread contagions and make them a target for crime. Most importantly, it will help thousands of small businesses – with hundreds of thousands of employees across the country – survive these difficult times while providing uninterrupted healthcare services. It doesn’t get more COVID-relevant than that.

While it is still uncertain when or how the House and Senate will arrive at a compromise for pandemic relief, we don’t have much time before the elections divert most of their attention.

Keep an eye out for updates on ways you can help get SAFE Banking passed this year.

We couldn’t do this work without the support and assistance of our valued members. If you are not yet a member, please support our work by joining today. If you already are a member, thank you for making our advocacy work possible.

 

Meet The Team: Morgan Fox – NCIA’s Director of Media Relations

This week marks my second anniversary working with the National Cannabis Industry Association, and with everything going on in the world, it very nearly slipped by me unnoticed. However, the occasion has given me an opportunity to reflect on the past and look to the future, both of which are truly motivating to me when it comes to the work we are doing in the present.

When I first came to NCIA, it was a very turbulent time for cannabis policy reform, the industry, and for me personally. 

After working in the movement for ten years, I was very familiar with what the organization stood for and what it had accomplished. I was eager to join those efforts and pivot more into federal policy work after a wave of state-level victories and to help protect businesses that were responsible for so much innovation despite unprecedented challenges over the years. 

It was also a very scary time: earlier in the year, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions had rescinded the Cole Memo that had guided federal prosecutors in their hands-off approach to regulated (but federally illegal) cannabis businesses, and then-Rep. Pete Sessions’ prohibitionist tenure as head of the House Rules Committee had a firm stranglehold on any cannabis-related legislation in Congress.

This move just happened to coincide with the impending birth of my first child, which made me look at everything through a different lens and ask myself some hard questions. Was I making the right decision to continue working in a field that could get shut down at any moment? Was there any hope for positive change in the foreseeable future? Should I keep working in cannabis when there are other ways I can try to make a positive difference for future generations?

The answer to those questions was a resounding “yes” as I was soon to see repeatedly in the coming months. The feared federal crackdown on state-legal cannabis businesses never came. Congress once again approved a spending ban on targeting medical cannabis patients and providers. By the end of the year, both Jeff and Pete were out of their jobs, a Democratic takeover of the House of Representatives had created opportunities for real progress on cannabis bills, and voters in three more states had approved ballot initiatives to create regulated adult or medical cannabis markets. It was an interesting year, to say the least.

But I think one of the most important developments for me was getting more direct exposure to the people that work so hard to advance this vibrant and inspiring industry. From the people who risked their freedom and often their life savings to open businesses when the threat of arrest and forfeiture were commonplace, to those working every day to undo the damage of our disastrous drug laws and create fair opportunities in the industry for people and communities that have been most harmed by prohibition, I can safely say I’ve never met more passionate and dedicated individuals. 

Practically every day I see developments and ideas that could have wide-reaching effects outside of cannabis. Social and criminal justice issues that are starting to become more central to cannabis policy are forcing us to reexamine many problems related to fairness and historical inequality in our society. The increasing focus on corporate responsibility and sustainability is creating a model for other businesses to follow at a time when we desperately need one. New innovations are improving health and wellness while paving the way for technologies, methods, and applications that have the potential to revolutionize agricultural and industrial fields. 

I want my child to grow up in a world with laws that prioritize justice, freedom, and fairness; with businesses that care about their communities and try to make the world a better, cleaner, and healthier place. There is still a lot of work to do, but I know I am in the right place to help make that world a reality in my own small way. I can’t wait to see what the next ten years hold for NCIA.

NCIA’s 2018 Post-Election Webinar

Watch this webinar recorded on Thursday, November 8, for NCIA’s recap of the midterm elections and what they mean for cannabis policy reform nationally. 

Speakers include Michael Correia, NCIA Government Relations Director; Morgan Fox, NCIA Communications Director; Matt Schweich, Deputy Director, Marijuana Policy Project; John Payne, New Approach Missouri; and Cole Haymond, Legalize ND.

Hear from representatives of the statewide cannabis campaigns in Michigan, Missouri, North Dakota, and Utah to find out what went right, what went wrong, and what happens next for regulators, businesses, and consumers. NCIA and the Marijuana Policy Project discussed the next states to watch and key federal legislation to follow in 2019.

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