Minnesota lawmakers on Thursday hashed out a bipartisan plan to legalize medical marijuana. Notably, the bill would only allow qualified patients to use the drug in oil, pill or vapor form — smoking would not be allowed.
“This bill is citizen government at its best,” Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton said in a statement Thursday, pledging to sign the bill. “It has been led by parents, who deeply love their children, are anguished by their pain, and insist their government try to help them.”
The bipartisan deal brought together two distinctly different approaches toward medical marijuana legalization that passed through the state House and Senate earlier this month.
Based off the House version, the proposal would set up a registry available to a limited number of patients who suffer from either eight specific ailments or a terminal illness. Two manufacturers would be allowed to distribute from a total of eight locations across the state in a measure lawmakers hope to implement by the middle of next year.
Legislators cut the deal down to the wire with just days before the end of the legislative session. A conference committee still needs to adopt the measure before it’s crunch time for the House and Senate to pass the proposal before Monday.
“The fact that we were able to come together with an agreement that is going to be signed into law is thrilling for a lot of people who have been fighting very, very hard through blood, sweat and tears in order to get something done this session,” state Rep. Carly Melin, author of the House version of the bill, said in a press conference Thursday afternoon.









