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“People are still in jail for a plant while billionaires sell it in bulk. That’s injustice.”
Cannabis Justice & Public Revenue Act – FAQ
Legalize it. Regulate it. Repair the damage. Share the wealth.
What is the Cannabis Justice & Public Revenue Act?
The Cannabis Justice & Public Revenue Act is a comprehensive federal cannabis reform law included in the Green Budget Framework. It ends federal prohibition, clears the records of non-violent offenders, creates a nationwide cannabis economy grounded in equity and justice, and dedicates cannabis tax revenue to community reinvestment and public health.
Is this full federal legalization?
Yes. The act:
Removes cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act (de-scheduling, not just rescheduling)
Legalizes cultivation, use, transport, and sale nationwide (age 21+)
Prohibits federal interference in state-legal cannabis activity
Establishes consistent safety, testing, and labeling standards across all states
What happens to people with past cannabis charges?
The act mandates:
Automatic expungement of all non-violent federal cannabis convictions
Incentives for states to do the same
Reentry and employment support programs for formerly incarcerated individuals
Legal protections against discrimination based on past cannabis use or convictions
Who can grow, sell, or distribute cannabis under this law?
The federal government will:
License producers and distributors focused on small businesses, worker co-ops, tribal nations, and equity applicants
Ban vertical monopolies and predatory corporate consolidation
Support state-managed systems, but set minimum federal standards for fairness, access, and safety
What are the tax and revenue policies?
The act introduces:
A 1% flat federal tax on all legal cannabis sales (wholesale and retail)
Strict rules preventing overtaxation at the federal level
100% of federal cannabis tax revenue directed to:
Community reinvestment in areas harmed by the Drug War
Mental health and substance use programs
Youth education and public health outreach
Small business support and co-op funding
How does this protect medical cannabis patients?
All registered patients retain access without federal interference
Federal protections are extended to providers and caregivers
States may not eliminate existing medical programs as a condition of joining the federal market
Federal research on cannabis medicine is accelerated and de-stigmatized
How is cannabis regulated under this act?
A new Federal Cannabis Oversight Office will:
Set national health and safety standards
Ensure transparent testing, labeling, and advertising rules
Monitor environmental sustainability in production
Prevent monopolies, corruption, and predatory marketing
States will maintain autonomy over additional rules—but cannot ban basic access, disproportionately criminalize, or violate federal civil rights standards.
What does the act do for tribal nations?
Recognizes tribal sovereignty to regulate cannabis without interference
Provides grant funding for tribal-owned businesses and public health systems
Removes federal legal barriers to tribal cannabis operations
How does the act address equity and reparative justice?
The act prioritizes:
Business licensing for individuals and families impacted by cannabis-related incarceration
Federal support for Black, Brown, Indigenous, and low-income entrepreneurs
Workforce training and union protections
Land access for community cultivators and equity-run cooperatives
Will cannabis still be criminalized at all?
Only in the following cases:
Sale to minors
Operation of a motor vehicle while impaired
Trafficking across international borders without compliance
Cultivation or distribution without required license (depending on quantity)
No one will be arrested or jailed for possession, personal use, or home growing (up to federally-set limits).
How is this different from other cannabis legalization bills?
This act goes further by:
Centering justice and repair, not just profits
Capping federal taxes to prevent price inflation
Supporting public, tribal, and worker-owned operations over corporations
Treating cannabis as a public good, not just a commodity
Paves a way for other medicinal products to become regulated
What is the long-term vision?
To end the Drug War for good, repair the harms of criminalization, and build a fair, thriving cannabis economy that serves the people—not just investors. This is not just about legalization. It’s about liberation, healing, and economic transformation.
