Minnesota could legalize recreational marijuana in the next month.
A Democrat-led recreational marijuana bill has cleared a gantlet of committees, setting it up for votes in the DFL-controlled state Legislature. The Minnesota House, which passed a similar proposal two years ago that was blocked by Senate Republicans, is expected to vote on the bill Monday. A Senate vote could follow soon after.
If approved, differences in the bills passed by each chamber would be reconciled in a conference committee. The final compromise bill would then need one last vote before heading to DFL Gov. Tim Walz, who supports legalizing marijuana.
The bill to set up a legal adult-use cannabis market would create a state agency that oversees the licensing of recreational and medical marijuana businesses. That agency would have a mandate to stamp out the black market, protect public safety, redress harms to communities caused by cannabis prohibition and "meet the market demand for cannabis flower and cannabis products."
The House bill dedicates $73 million to set up the regulatory structure, pay for education and addiction programs, fund law enforcement grants and other measures. The program is expected to be self-sustaining in 2026 and beyond.
City governments could set restrictions on where marijuana businesses could be located but not ban them.
Minnesotans with misdemeanor marijuana charges would see their records cleared, and a committee would be formed to evaluate expungement for felony marijuana crimes on a case-by-case basis.
While those overarching elements have remained largely unchanged, several finer points have been updated since the House bill was introduced in January and a Senate version followed. Here are the highlights: