Adam Ebbin
- Democratic
- Senator
- District 39
Possession and consumption of marijuana; penalty. Decriminalizes simple marijuana possession and provides a civil penalty of no more than $25. Current law imposes a maximum fine of $500 and a maximum 30-day jail sentence for a first offense, and subsequent offenses are a Class 1 misdemeanor. The bill provides that any violation of simple possession of marijuana may be charged by a summons in form the same as the uniform summons for motor vehicle law violations and that no court costs shall be assessed for such violations. The bill also provides that a person's criminal history record information shall not include records of any charges or judgments for such violations and records of such charges or judgements shall not be reported to the Central Criminal Records Exchange. Also, the bill states that the procedure for appeal and trial of any violation of simple possession of marijuana shall be the same as provided by law for misdemeanors. The bill also provides that if requested by either party on appeal to the circuit court, trial by jury shall be provided and the Commonwealth shall be required to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. Additionally, the bill provides that the suspended sentence/substance abuse screening provisions and driver's license suspension provisions apply only to criminal violations or to civil violations by a juvenile. The bill defines "marijuana" to include hashish oil and creates a rebuttable presumption that a person who possesses no more than one ounce of marijuana possesses it for personal use. The bill also (i) makes records relating to the arrest, criminal charge, or conviction of possession of marijuana not open to public inspection and disclosure, except in certain circumstances; (ii) prohibits employers and educational institutions from requiring an applicant for employment or admission to disclose information related to such arrest, criminal charge, or conviction; and (iii) prohibits agencies, officials, and employees of the state and local governments from requiring an applicant for a license, permit, registration, or governmental service to disclose information concerning such arrest, criminal charge, or conviction. Also, the bill allows a person charged with a civil offense who is acquitted, a nolle prosequi is taken, or the charge is otherwise dismissed to file a petition requesting expungement of the police records and court records related to the charge. Finally, the bill requires the Secretaries of Agriculture and Forestry, Finance, Health and Human Resources, and Public Safety and Homeland Security to convene a work group to study the impact on the Commonwealth of legalizing the sale and personal use of marijuana and report the recommendations of the work group to the General Assembly and the Governor by November 30, 2020. This bill incorporates SB 815 and is identical to HB 972.
Marijuana; decriminalization of simple marijuana possession; penalty. Decriminalizes simple marijuana possession and provides a civil penalty of no more than $50, or 5 hours of community service as an alternative punishment. Current law imposes a maximum fine of $500 and a maximum 30-day jail sentence for a first offense, and subsequent offenses are a Class 1 misdemeanor. The bill provides that the suspended sentence and substance abuse screening provisions and driver's license suspension provisions apply only to criminal violations. The bill also provides that simple possession of marijuana may constitute conduct that presents a serious threat to the well-being of a child for the purposes of defining a "child in need of services." The bill defines marijuana to include hashish oil. The bill raises the threshold amount of marijuana subject to the offense of distribution or possession with intent to distribute from one-half ounce to one ounce. The bill contains technical amendments. This bill incorporates SB 815.
Possession and consumption of marijuana; penalty. Decriminalizes simple marijuana possession and provides a civil penalty of no more than $25. Current law imposes a maximum fine of $500 and a maximum 30-day jail sentence for a first offense, and subsequent offenses are a Class 1 misdemeanor. The bill provides that any violation of simple possession of marijuana shall be charged by a summons in form the same as the uniform summons for motor vehicle law violations and that no court costs shall be assessed for such violations. The bill also provides that a person's criminal history record information shall not include records of any charges or judgments for such violations and records of such charges or judgements shall not be reported to the Central Criminal Records Exchange. However, the bill states that if a violation occurs while an individual is operating a commercial motor vehicle, such violation shall be reported to the Department of Motor Vehicles and shall be included on such individual's driving record. Also, the bill states that the procedure for appeal and trial of any violation of simple possession of marijuana shall be the same as provided by law for misdemeanors. The bill also provides that if requested by either party on appeal to the circuit court, trial by jury shall be provided and the Commonwealth shall be required to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. Additionally, the bill provides that the suspended sentence/substance abuse screening provisions apply only to criminal violations. The bill defines "marijuana" to include hashish oil and creates a rebuttable presumption that a person who possesses no more than one ounce of marijuana possesses it for personal use. The bill also (i) makes records relating to the arrest, criminal charge, or conviction of possession of marijuana not open to public inspection and disclosure, except in certain circumstances; (ii) prohibits employers and educational institutions from requiring an applicant for employment or admission to disclose information related to such arrest, criminal charge, or conviction; and (iii) prohibits agencies, officials, and employees of the state and local governments from requiring an applicant for a license, permit, registration, or governmental service to disclose information concerning such arrest, criminal charge, or conviction. Also, the bill allows a person charged with a civil offense who is acquitted, a nolle prosequi is taken, or the charge is otherwise dismissed to file a petition requesting expungement of the police records and court records related to the charge. Finally, the bill requires the Secretaries of Agriculture and Forestry, Finance, Health and Human Resources, and Public Safety and Homeland Security to convene a work group to study the impact on the Commonwealth of legalizing the sale and personal use of marijuana and report the recommendations of the work group to the General Assembly and the Governor by November 30, 2020. This bill incorporates SB 815 and is identical to HB 972.
Marijuana; decriminalization of simple marijuana possession; penalty. Decriminalizes simple marijuana possessionand provides a civil penalty of no more than $50. Current law imposesa maximum fine of $500 and a maximum 30-day jail sentence for a firstoffense, and subsequent offenses are a Class 1 misdemeanor. The billprovides that the suspended sentence and substance abuse screeningprovisions and driver's license suspension provisions apply onlyto criminal violations or to civil violations by a juvenile. Thebill defines marijuana to include hashish oil. The bill raises thethreshold amount of marijuana subject to the offense of distributionor possession with intent to distribute from one-half ounce to oneounce. The bill also allows a person to petition for expungementof convictions and deferred disposition dismissals for marijuanapossession when all court costs and fines and orders of restitutionhave been paid. The bill contains technical amendments.
Approved by Governor-Chapter 1286 (effective 7/1/20)
Reenrolled Bill Communicated to Governor on April 29, 2020
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., May 22, 2020
VOTE: (56-Y 37-N)
House concurred in Governor's recommendation #'s 1-5 and 7-16 (56-Y 37-N)
Reenrolled bill text (SB2ER2)
Reenrolled
Governor's recommendation adopted in-part
Passed by temporarily
Senate rejected Governor's recommendation #17 (5-Y 35-N)
Senate rejected Governor's recommendation #6 (6-Y 34-N)
Senate concurred in Governor's recommendation's #'s 1-5 and 7-16 (26-Y 14-N)
Signed by Speaker as reenrolled
Signed by President as reenrolled
Governor's recommendation received by Senate
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 11, 2020
Enrolled Bill Communicated to Governor on March 20, 2020
Impact statement from DPB (SB2ER)
Signed by Speaker
Signed by President
Enrolled
Conference report agreed to by House (57-Y 33-N)
VOTE: Adoption (57-Y 33-N)
Conference report agreed to by Senate (27-Y 12-N)
Conference report rejected by Senate (2-Y 38-N)
Second Conference substitute printed 20109965D-S3
Second conferees appointed by Senate
Second conferees appointed by House
House acceded to request for second conference committee
Senate requested second conference committee (26-Y 14-N)
Impact statement from DPB (SB2S2)
VOTE: Adoption (58-Y 38-N)
VOTE: Adoption #2 (61-Y 37-N)
Conference report agreed to by House (61-Y 37-N)
Amended by conference committee
First Conference substitute printed 20109521D-S2
Conference report agreed to by House (58-Y 38-N)
Reconsideration of conference report agreed to by House
Conferees appointed by House
Conferees appointed by Senate
House insisted on substitute
Read third time
Passed by temporarily
Committee on Courts of Justice substitute rejected 20108640D-H1
Committee on Appropriations substitute agreed to 20108848D-H2
Engrossed by House - committee substitute SB2H2
Passed House with substitute (63-Y 35-N)
VOTE: Passage (63-Y 35-N)
House substitute rejected by Senate (1-Y 38-N)
House requested conference committee
Senate acceded to request (40-Y 0-N)
Impact statement from DPB (SB2H2)
Read second time
House committee, floor amendments and substitutes offered
Committee substitute printed 20108848D-H2
Reported from Appropriations with substitute (16-Y 6-N)
Reported from Courts of Justice with substitute (12-Y 8-N)
Referred to Committee on Appropriations
Committee substitute printed 20108640D-H1
House committee, floor amendments and substitutes offered
Read first time
Impact statement from DPB (SB2ES1)
Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
Placed on Calendar
Reading of substitute waived
Passed Senate (27-Y 13-N)
Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N)
Printed as engrossed 20106511D-ES1
Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute with amendment SB2ES1
Amendment by Senator Ebbin agreed to
Reading of amendment waived
Amendment by Senator Surovell rejected
Reading of amendment waived
Committee substitute agreed to 20106511D-S1
Read second time
Constitutional reading dispensed (36-Y 0-N)
Reported from Finance and Appropriations (12-Y 3-N)
Reported from Judiciary with substitute (10-Y 3-N)
Rereferred to Finance and Appropriations
Committee substitute printed 20106511D-S1
Incorporates SB815 (Morrissey)
Impact statement from DPB (SB2)
Assigned Judiciary sub: Criminal Law
Moved from Courts of Justice to Judiciary due to a change of the committee name
Referred to Committee on the Judiciary
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/08/20 20100705D
Bill Text Versions | Format |
---|---|
Impact statement from DPB (SB2H2) | HTML |
Impact statement from DPB (SB2S2) | HTML |
SB2S3 | HTML |
Bill text as passed Senate and House (SB2ER) | HTML |
Reenrolled bill text (SB2ER2) | HTML |
Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP1286) | HTML |
Document | Format |
---|---|
Amendment: SB2ASR | HTML |
Amendment: SB2AS | HTML |
Amendment: SB2AG | HTML |
Amendment: SB2AC | HTML |
Data on Open States is updated periodically throughout the day from the official website of the Virginia General Assembly.
If you notice any inconsistencies with these official sources, feel free to file an issue.