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New York Gov. Wants to Let Police Use Cannabis Odor as Evidence for Drugged Driving – Ganjapreneur | How to order Skittles Moonrock online

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Wed / Feb 19th

by TG Branfalt

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul included provisions allowing police to use the odor of cannabis as evidence that a person is driving while impaired in her annual executive budget.

Full story after the jump.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) included provisions to allow police to use the odor of cannabis as evidence that a person is driving while impaired in her executive budget, Spectrum News reports. The plan is facing pushback from one of the state’s top lawmakers, Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes (D), who authored the state’s adult-use bill and called the governor’s proposal ā€œunnecessary.ā€

Office of Cannabis Management acting and deputy Executive Director Felicia A.B. Reid toldĀ Spectrum News that Hochul’s plan ā€œundermines the basic tenetsā€ of the adult-use law and decriminalization more broadly.

Kaelan Castetter, a policy advisor with theĀ Empire Cannabis Manufacturers Alliance, argued that, if approved, the plan ā€œessentially criminalizes working for the cannabis industry.ā€

ā€œIn particular, working in cultivation or processing facilities, it’s inevitable you will leave, or an employee will leave their shift smelling like cannabis even if they de-gown and change into other clothes. Cannabis is very pungent.ā€ — Castetter to Spectrum News

Kassie White, a spokesperson for Hochul, told Spectrum News the ā€œadministration is actively negotiating with the state Legislature to keep New Yorkers safe from drugged driving, while maintaining the equity goalsā€ outlined in the adult-use law.

The outlawing of cannabis odor as an impetuous for vehicle searches was a sticking point between lawmakers and then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), who signed the adult-use bill into law, but the reforms were included in the final version and enacted into law.

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