2 minute read

EDITOR’S NOTE

Next Article
WINNERS & LOSERS

WINNERS & LOSERS

JENNY DEHUFF

Editor-in-chief

Advertisement

EDITOR’S NOTE

LEGALIZING RECREATIONAL marijuana in Pennsylvania should be a joint effort between Democrats and Republicans. So I’m hoping Republican state Sen. Mike Regan will follow through on his plan to introduce a bill this month to do just that. If he does, it just needs to win the approval of a good number of his colleagues – mostly on his side of the aisle.

Legalizing marijuana is no longer championed only by deadbeats or people in hippie circles. It is now regularly embraced by both political parties – many of whom realize and appreciate its economic, agricultural and medicinal benefits – and who understand it’s past time to stop fighting a losing battle.

I recently spoke with two people who were gracious enough to share their names with me and their weed stories.

Machele Nettles, 40, a jewelry designer from Philadelphia, started smoking weed when she was a teenager. Today, she smokes or ingests it daily for a variety of reasons – part medicinal, part recreational. She buys from a grower in Pennsylvania but said she would buy from a commercial dispensary if one existed.

“I mean – it’s like medicine,” she said. “I think that it helps people. And it’s a lot less dangerous than alcohol, which is legal. I just don’t understand why it’s not allowed.”

Tyler Marino, 29, owns and operates a cannabis-themed home decor company in Philly called Snug Nug. He started smoking weed at 11, mostly because he was hanging out with an older crowd. Now, he smokes or eats weed or hashish daily.

Marino told me he suffers from a variety of “life’s ailments,” likening marijuana to a coping mechanism. But he also described how getting high helps him with depression, anxiety and physical pain. The problem is, he has to buy it illegally.

“I typically find all of my hash on the black market. Because Pennsylvania, at the moment, does not have solventless concentrates to offer their patients, which is a big issue for me,” he said.

Both Nettles and Marino raise great points – and they are among the many examples politicians must consider as they inevitably decide that legalizing recreational marijuana in Pennsylvania is truly the only way forward.

MAY 24, 2022 6:30PM-9PM KING MANSION, HARRISBURG, PA

CELEBRATING THE MOST POWERFUL PEOPLE IN PENNSYLVANIA

City & State PA’s published, must-read list of Pennsylvania’s most influential elected officials, labor unions, advocacy groups, political consultants, lobbyists, media personalities, business leaders, and more will be back this May! Join us as we highlight the best in the Keystone State and celebrate the Pennsylvania Power 100 with an in-person event in Harrisburg. Don’t miss our guest speakers and a rundown of all 100 on our list! KEYNOTE SPEAKER Stacy Garrity, Treasurer; State of Pennsylvania

Register Here

For more information about City & State Events, please contact events@cityandstatepa.com For more information about advertising and sponsorship opportunities, please contact advertising@cityandstatepa.com

This article is from: