
by Dick Hall-Sizemore
The 2024 General Assembly has taken care of a piece of unfinished business. It has passed a bill to set up a framework for the sale of marijuana.
The 2021 General Assembly made it legal for individuals to possess a small amount of marijuana. However, there was not enough time to craft consensus legislation to regulate its sale. That task was delayed until the next year.

That plan was upended when Republicans won a majority of seats in the House of Delegates for the 2022 and 2023 sessions. Any bill to establish a framework to regulate the sale of marijuana was killed.
The result was a strange state of limbo. It was legal to possess marijuana, but it was not legal to sell it. A black market flourished. A Cannabis Control Authority (the Authority), with a governing board, was created, but had nothing to regulate. (When the term โAuthorityโ is used in this article, the term includes the administrative agency and the governing board.)
With Democrats back in the majority in both houses in 2024, one of their top priorities was to legalize the sale of marijuana and create a framework to regulate it and tax it. (more…)



by Donald Smith

by Kerry Dougherty


In 2022, the General Assembly disregarded two long-standing principles of funding transportation projects in the Commonwealth.ย Republican Gov. Youngkin followed down that path this year.

