One St. Paul man described his struggles to find work with marijuana possession on his criminal record. A woman worried about pot smoke in the park where her family plays. A man wondered how police in Minnesota's capital city will juggle enforcement of smoking laws with more serious crimes.
More than two dozen people packed into City Council chambers on Wednesday afternoon to weigh in on a proposed law that would limit where people can smoke outdoors. But the debate grew more wide-ranging, reflecting the balancing act faced by local leaders across Minnesota with legal recreational cannabis now a fact of life.
"I think the most important thing is balancing everyone's enjoyment of clean air with people's right to use certain substances," Council Member Chris Tolbert said.
Another 40 people submitted written comments to the council, both for and against the proposal. In St. Paul, the possibility of new smoking regulations is creating tension between two long-standing progressive movements: efforts to regulate the tobacco industry and curb secondhand smoke, and efforts to decriminalize marijuana.
It remains unclear what St. Paul's regulation will look like. After several members proposed last-minute amendments, and with a handful of legal questions lingering, the council voted to postpone the matter and bring a more final proposal to next week's meeting.
Last month, Tolbert initially proposed a ban on smoking — of tobacco, hemp or cannabis — in all "city-controlled public places." But Council Member Mitra Jalali raised concerns that such a sweeping ban would disadvantage renters and lead to discriminatory enforcement.
"We can't undermine one of the most important racial justice pieces of racial justice legislation that our state has ever passed," said Jalali, noting that people of color have disproportionately faced the ripple effects of minor drug offenses, including incarceration and the loss of housing and job opportunities.
State Rep. Athena Hollins and state Sen. Clare Oumou Verbeten, both DFLers representing St. Paul, spoke out against restrictions on cannabis use.