Democrats in Olympia made sure that this plant remains illegal for yet another year. Credit: Lester Black
Democrats in Olympia made sure that this plant remains illegal for yet another year.
Democrats in Olympia made sure that this plant remains illegal for yet another year. Lester Black

Washingtonโ€™s lawmakers have failedโ€”yet againโ€”to legalize homegrown pot in our state. That means we will continue to be one of the only places in the world where you can legally walk into a store and buy a $1 joint, yet it is illegal for you to have a cannabis house plant.

HB 1131, which would have given every adult in Washington state the legal right to grow six pot plants, failed to make it out of the House of Representativeโ€™s Committee on Appropriations before the committeeโ€™s deadline. That means the billโ€™s chances of passage during this yearโ€™s quick legislative session are essential dead.

The bipartisan bill was looking good this year, with a majority of Seattleโ€™s lawmakers supporting it. The proposed law got further than ever before when it made it out of the Commerce and Gaming Committee and got a hearing in Appropriations. But it still failed, despite the mountain of common sense reasons for passing it.

In fact, the bill may have died because there were TOO MANY good reasons for passing it.

Rep. Brian Blake, a Democrat from Aberdeen who sponsored the bill, said people testifying in support of the bill during a hearing this month may have taken too much of the committeeโ€™s time.

โ€œItโ€™s very possible to kill the bill you want by over testifying,โ€ Blake said. โ€œTwenty people signed in to testify and the committee spent an entire hour on the bill which I think kind of lulled the committee to sleep.โ€

Rep. Tim Ormsby, a Democrat from Spokane who chairs the Appropriations Committee, told The Stranger that he reprimanded Blake after the February 5 hearing.

โ€œI chewed out the prime sponsor saying, ‘Brian we had all of this testimony at the end Iโ€™ve got cranky members,’โ€ Ormsby said. โ€œIt is a widely known principal that a billโ€™s chances of success is inversely proportionate to the amount of time a committee spends on it.โ€

(Side note: this makes me regret telling readers on February 3 that it would be a good idea to show up in person to show support for the bill. I didn’t realize lawmakers were so uncomfortable seeing their constituents in person.)

Ormsby said his โ€œadmonishmentโ€ was only towards Blake and that the extended testimony didnโ€™t actually factor into the committeeโ€™s decision not to not even let the bill get a vote. Ormsby said the committeeโ€™s members were worried about the federal government possibly being mad at Washington for legalizing homegrown weed and threatening Washingtonโ€™s โ€œnascentโ€ weed industry.

This isโ€”of courseโ€”complete bullshit. Colorado has had legalized home grows since 2012 and they still have a fully functioning weed market. Itโ€™s also strange to call Washingtonโ€™s weed industry โ€œnascentโ€ when weed has been legal in Washington for eight years. People were buying new iPhone 5s when weed first went on sale in Washington.

Hopefully next year Washingtonโ€™s lawmakers will wake up and legalize homegrown weed.

Lester Black is a former staff writer for The Stranger, where he wrote about Seattle news, cannabis, and beer. He is sometimes sober.