Senate advances Black Caucus’ legislation, bill on social equity in cannabis licensing

In a session that went into the early morning, the Senate passed a follow up to legislation from 2019 aimed at improving the social equity commitment in the state’s cannabis licensing program.

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Illinois State Capitol in Springfield.

Illinois State Capitol in Springfield.

AP file

SPRINGFIELD — The Illinois Senate advanced bills focused on improving social equity in the state’s cannabis licensing process and another that could end cash bail early Wednesday, hours before new members are sworn in.

In a session that went well into the early morning, the Senate passed a follow up to legislation from 2019 aimed at making the social equity commitment in the state’s cannabis licensing program better.

The bill creates two systems for the licensing lottery — tiered and qualified — to determine  who might receive a dispensary license. The legislation would also create a new lottery for 75 additional adult-use cannabis dispensary licenses for those in the first round who scored high but didn’t receive one of the first 75 licenses.

“The main goal here is to get more licenses out the door and into the hands of socially equitable applicants,” said Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin. “This plan adds more validity to Illinois’ already strong claim to being the industry leader in cannabis legalization that other states can seek to model their programs after.”

Having passed the Senate, the bill will return to the House for a concurrence vote.

The state’s upper legislative chamber advanced three pieces of the Black Caucus’ agenda: a sweeping criminal justice proposal, measures focused on economic equity, and another on health and human services.

The criminal justice legislation would end cash bail and require the use of body cameras statewide by 2025. That measure, which leaders in law enforcement argue would “destroy law enforcement’s ability to keep communities safe,” passed 32 to 23 with a few members not voting. 

The health care legislation would delay hospital closures for up to 60 days for hospitals that have submitted applications to close and aims to stop future closures during the COVID-19 pandemic. It passed the Senate 35 to 18.

House members will likely vote on these pieces of legislation Wednesday, before new members are sworn into both chambers.

The House Executive Committee advanced bills to the full House late Tuesday that would allow the state’s lower legislative chamber to meet and vote remotely as well as an ethics package that could impose a lobbying ban on public officials.

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