Colorado Senate Votes 33 to 1 to Streamline Marijuana Licensing and Regulations

Colorado’s full Senate has overwhelmingly approved a bill “to address efficiency in the regulation of existing marijuana licensees.”

Filed by Senator Julie Gonzales, Senate Bill 76 was passed by the Senate today 33 to 1, sending it to the House of Representatives. Passage through the House will send the bill to Governor Jared Polis, who says he will sign it into law if given the chance. The only “No” vote was Senator Byron Pelton.

The bill makes a series of changes to the regulation of marijuana businesses, including:

License Renewal

The bill extends the license renewal period, currently annually, for marijuana businesses to once every two years. Renewal applications do not need to repeat the required fingerprint-based criminal history check for initial applications. If a business possesses multiple types of marijuana licenses, MED must allow that business to submit a unified application renewal and coordinate the performance review of the single business renewing multiple licenses.

Identification Cards

The bill removes the requirement that passive marijuana business owners obtain an identification card from the MED. It also requires that conditional employee licenses be issued after a review of the application, rather than an initial investigation.

Regulation of Marijuana Contaminants

The bill changes the testing requirements for the Marijuana Enforcement Division (MED) in the Department of Revenue (DOR) regarding contaminants in marijuana products. Under current law, MED must test to ensure that products do not contain any contaminants that are injurious to health. The bill requires MED to ensure that products do not contain contaminants in an amount that is determined to be injurious.

Current law requires any business that is found to have a contaminant to document and destroy the contaminated product. The bill allows the business to retest and remediate the product.

Frequency of Testing

MED may not require that a product pass a test multiple times before it is transferred to another business or sold to a consumer, with certain exceptions. MED must adopt rules allowing a business to conduct less testing of its products if the business consistently passes tests over a specific time period. Businesses that participate in a reduced testing program may be a charged a fee, not exceed $4,000 per facility. Participating businesses may have reduced testing for up to three years.

Violations

The bill requires DOR to classify each violation for a marijuana business as either a
safety violation or a technical violation. Technical violations are removed from a licensee’s record
either one year after the violation is reported or upon renewal of the license.

Record Keeping

Current law requires marijuana licensees to retain a record of all business transactions for the past three years. The bill changes this requirement to the past two years.

For the full text of the proposed law, click here.

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