Washington (CNN)The
House of Representatives voted to pass legislation that would allow the
cannabis industry access to banking and financial services, even as the
substance remains illegal under federal law.
The
Secure and Fair Enforcement Banking Act, known as the SAFE Banking Act,
passed the House Wednesday by a vote of 321 to 103. Nearly half of the
Republican caucus joined their Democratic colleagues in voting for the
bill. Only one Democrat, Rep. Terri Sewell of Alabama, voted no.
The vote is a win for cannabis retailers and American banking and credit union associations, as well as a bipartisan group of attorneys general that supported the measure.
Banks
providing services to state-approved cannabis businesses could face
criminal and civil liability under some banking statutes, so cannabis
companies resort to operating on cash.
"It's
an invitation to theft, it's an invitation to money laundering already,
it's an invitation to tax evasion, and it stifles the opportunities of
this business," Democratic Rep. Ed Perlmutter of Colorado, a sponsor of
the bill, said on the House floor Wednesday before the vote.
The
bill would allow "safe harbor" for financial institutions, as well as
other ancillary businesses, that might conduct business with
cannabis-related companies, Perlmutter said. He also argued the bill
would stifle violent crime against employees and store owners.
Small
amounts of recreational marijuana is legal for adults in 11 states and
Washington, DC, and the substance is decriminalized in an additional 15
states.
"If someone wants to oppose
legalization of marijuana, that's their prerogative. But American
voters have spoken and continue to speak, and the fact is you can't put
the genie back in the bottle," Perlmutter said Wednesday. "Prohibition
is over."
Steve Hawkins, the
executive director at the Marijuana Policy Project, said Wednesday's
vote is an "indication that Congress is more willing than ever to
support and take action on sensible cannabis policies."
"The
passage of the SAFE Banking Act improves the likelihood that other
cannabis legislation will advance at the federal level," Hawkins said in
a statement Wednesday.
Rep.
Patrick McHenry, R-North Carolina, opposed the bill, arguing that
Congress should have a larger debate on the "underlying issue" of
whether or not cannabis should be a schedule 1 substance.
He
commended Perlmutter for working with Republicans to include a number
of GOP priorities in the bill, but argued, "We do not fully understand
the sweeping implications of this legislation. We do not yet know what
the resulting regulatory regime will look like, nor do we have any
assurance it will not expose the current financial system to illicit
activity."
"This bill doesn't
change the fact that cannabis remains a prohibited schedule 1 substance
under the controlled substances act. To that end, if we seek to give
financial institutions certainty, we should deal with the listing of
cannabis as a schedule 1 substance, not debating a partial solution for
financial institutions to what is a much larger problem and a larger
societal issue that we must wrestle with," McHenry said.
A
companion bill in the Senate, introduced by Democratic Sen. Jeff
Merkley of Oregon and Republican Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado in April,
has yet to be voted on by the Senate Banking Committee, which held a
hearing in late July on the issue.
Republican Sen. Mike Crapo, who chairs the banking committee, told Politico
earlier this month that he will hold a vote on cannabis banking
legislation but was unclear on whether he would work off Merkley and
Gardner's bill.
"We're working to
try to get a bill ready," Crapo told Politico, adding, "We may craft our
own bill or we may work with them to craft any amended legislation."
Neither Crapo nor Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell support the federal legalization of marijuana.
While Democrats supported the SAFE Banking Act, several reiterated their calls for the legalization of the drug.
"This
bill is but one important piece of what should be a comprehensive
series of cannabis reform bills," Rep. Maxine Waters of California said
Wednesday on the House floor, adding that "it's long overdue that
Congress to address the unjust criminalization of marijuana use."
She urged the House Judiciary Committee to pass chairman Jerry Nadler's bill, the MORE Act, that
would decriminalize marijuana on the federal level, remove marijuana
from the Controlled Substances Act, and re-sentence and expunge past and
pending convictions.
Ahead
of the vote, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said in a statement that
he's "proud" to bring the SAFE Banking Act to the House floor, "but I
believe it does not go far enough."
"This
must be a first step toward the decriminalization and de-scheduling of
marijuana, which has led to the prosecution and incarceration of far too
many of our fellow Americans for possession," he argued.
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