The cannabis industry’s Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act failed to get attached to a year-end funding package in congress this week, following objections from Republicans. This failure marks what could be the end of the line for the proposed legislation when the Republicans take over the House next month.
We needed bipartisan support for #SAFEbanking to pass, and again, we were close, but it still wasn't enough. We're disappointed but we'll continue fighting for a safer, cash-free cannabis industry. $CURA $CURLF pic.twitter.com/jYGxbWxZ7D
— Boris Jordan (@Boris_Jordan) December 19, 2022
The SAFE Banking Act aims to reform banking in the cannabis industry, which currently still operates largely on a cash basis, putting businesses and their employees at risk for robberies and the resulting economic harm. Even in states with legal marijuana, businesses get refused by banks because marijuana, under federal law, is still illegal.
And beyond that, the measure — and the hope for its passing — was the litmus paper test for the broader sentiment on marijuana and the course for its legalization on a federal level.
It is irresponsible to do this without a federal regulatory framework to address public health and law enforcement issues. Senators take an oath to uphold the law, not ignore it.
— Senator John Cornyn (@JohnCornyn) December 16, 2022
Schumer makes last-ditch push for cannabis banking bill https://t.co/6kBnwXkFxt via @politico
SAFE was also the way for cannabis companies to grow their businesses by being able to win the favor of institutional investors, and list on the major US stock exchanges.
Now that #Safebanking is dead, can we please bury it in a deep grave and pour cement on it. Lets be real, anyone that’s been tweeting safe safe safe & cashtagging a stock does not care about:
— Jason Spatafora (@WolfOfWeedST) December 20, 2022
Social equity
Safety of employees
Felons having access to capital
More competition…
While it received some bipartisan support, Republicans still stood against the measure.
“They’re dead set on anything in marijuana,” said Sen. Cory Booker, one of the proponents of legalization, in a HuffPost report. “That to me is the obstacle.”’
When he was Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell blocked any House-passed cannabis legislation. And with the Republicans gaining control of the House for two years again beginning next month, it’s likely that no cannabis-related bills like SAFE will become law.
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