Politics

Massachusetts Governor Pushes Back on Cannabis Cafés

Published on February 13, 2018 · Last updated July 28, 2020
A vaporizer is laying fown and has mariguana neat it. Electronic herb vaporizer

BOSTON (AP) — Republican Gov. Charlie Baker’s administration is again urging state marijuana regulators to hold off on allowing so-called “cannabis cafes,” or other places where cannabis products could be consumed on site.

“People should crawl before they walk and walk before they run.”

In a letter Monday to the Cannabis Control Commission, Secretary of Public Safety Dan Bennett warned that licensing social consumption establishments — as envisioned in draft regulations — would likely lead to more people driving while under the influence of marijuana. Bennett also wrote it could increase access to recreational marijuana for minors.

Baker wants regulators to focus at least initially on licensing retail stores where customers could buy marijuana but not be allowed to use it on the premises.

The governor, who opposed cannabis legalization in the state, told reporters Monday that “people should crawl before they walk and walk before they run.”

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