A work group she established to help get that done had its first meeting this week.

“Better that we embrace it, deal with the public safety issues, be earnest about it, be upfront about it and don’t try to narrow the public’s involvement with a 30-day legislative session. Let’s do it on the front end and let’s do it right,” the first-year governor said at a news conference earlier this week.

SANTA FE, N.M. — There’s no question Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham wants state lawmakers to take up the matter of legalizing marijuana when they meet again in January.

The group isn’t starting from scratch as it’s looking to use legislation from the last session as a template.


That measure, which stalled in the Senate, would have imposed a tax of at least 17 percent on marijuana sales. The revenue would have gone toward health, law enforcement, and research programs.

Albuquerque City Councilor Pat Davis, the leader of the roughly 20-member group, said more than five dozen different cannabis-related bills have been introduced since 2012. Most of them have been thoroughly analyzed, he said.

“We have a tremendous amount of resources and New Mexico-based data,” Davis said.

The group plans to hold at least four more public meetings before making a final recommendation to Lujan Grisham by the end of October. Those meetings will include events in Albuquerque and Las Cruces.

Democratic Representative Javier Martinez, who sponsored this year’s legalization bill, expressed optimism about the process and praised the governor’s leadership on the issue.

“New Mexico is ready to lead the nation with a comprehensive legalization program that will right the wrongs caused by the failed war on drugs and develop new and profitable economic opportunities for all New Mexicans,” Martinez told the Albuquerque Journal after Wednesday’s meeting.

The working group will have to grapple with thorny issues that have tripped up previous legalization attempts, including public safety concerns and the potential effects to the more than 70,000 people who have medical marijuana cards.


In addition, this year’s bill would have legalized recreational marijuana sold through state-run stores, an idea that drew opposition. The working group will focus on the first version of the bill, which does not include that provision, though later versions will also be studied.

The legislation would have to make it through the House and Senate in what will be an election year for all 112 state lawmakers.

Republican Senator Cliff Pirtle acknowledged election dynamics could be a factor.

“At the end of the day, as legislators we need to not focus on the next election and instead on passing good policy,” he told the Journal.

State lawmakers did approve a separate proposal during this year’s session that reduced penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana.

Just two other states — Illinois and Vermont — have legalized marijuana legislatively. The other nine that have legalized recreational cannabis use have done so through voter petition or referendum efforts, which are not allowed in New Mexico.