Pot to go public: Governor signals start of retail marijuana in Virginia
Governor Spanberger signed legislation Tuesday to officially begin the official, legal sale of marijuana in Virginia beginning July 1st, 2027.
At a press conference in Richmond, Spanberger said the concerns of legal marijuana and its safety for children that resulted in a veto of 7 years work were answered and Virginia’s retail sales are regulated and farmers are treated fairly.
Additional details on the compromise marijuana legislation issued by Spanberger’s office:
– Creates a maximum of 350 retail cannabis establishment licenses — comparable to commercial markets in other states — and increases the possession limit from 1 ounce to 2 ounces. The CCA would begin accepting applications for licenses on February 1, 2027.
– Strengthens child safety protections — including prohibitions on cartoon advertisements, requirements for child-safe packaging, and prohibitions on products sold in the shape of animals, fruits, vehicles, or humans.
– Authorizes the CCA to create escalating penalties for failing to do ID checks — including license revocation for repeated underage sale and requirements that retail stores be no less than 1,000 feet from schools, hospitals, playgrounds, and drug treatment facilities.
– Strengthens oversight of industrial intoxicating hemp — which is currently regulated by the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services — by transferring regulation to the CCA.
– Allows the CCA to maintain a public licensee registry, establish a tip line for members of the public to anonymously report concerns about illicit practices, investigate the ownership and control interests of licensees, and develop policies regarding the audit of ownership and financial relationships across licensees.
– Allocates the revenue of cannabis sales towards early childcare and education, K-12 education, behavioral health programming for substance use disorder prevention and treatment programs, public health programs, and the Cannabis Equity Reinvestment Fund.
– The fund — established in the 2021 legislation — supports scholarships, workforce development, small business growth, reentry services, and community-based initiatives designed to expand opportunity, strengthen economic mobility, and help address longstanding disparities in communities historically and disproportionately targeted and affected by over-policing.
– Establishes a 6 percent state tax rate on cannabis products to transition Virginia to a regulated market from the current illicit market. After July 1, 2029, the state tax will increase to 8 percent to generate additional revenue for education and public health programs. The bill further allows localities to adopt an additional 1-3.5 percent local tax combined with the existing retail sales and use tax.
(IMAGE: Property of Pexels / Harrison Haines)

