TRENTON - While legislators are still crafting a bill to legalize marijuana in New Jersey, some of the proposed changes could bring legal weed to your doorstep — literally.

Legislators are yet to unveil the final version but are "98 percent" done, according to legal weed advocates. Based on a series of proposed amendments from the Senate Judiciary Committee dated Sept. 12 — first reported by NJ Advance Media — the bill has undergone numerous changes.

Some of those changes were to add features that marijuana users are clamoring for in the nine states where marijuana is legal.

HIGH HOPES: We went out west to see how legal weed changed things. (Spoiler: It changed everything.)

Here are three new ways that New Jersey might separate itself from the pack when it comes to marijuana. These amendments are simply "proposed" and could be removed before the final bill is introduced, voted on or signed into law.

Scroll to the bottom of this page to check out the proposed amendments (in full) for yourself!

Dispensary to doorstep

The Garden State could become one of just four states — joining California, Nevada and Oregon — that allow weed deliveries, if the proposed amendments are included in the final bill and signed into law.

For a customer, the rules are simple: You can order 1 ounceof marijuana from a dispensary licensed to make deliveries, either on its own or through a vendor licensed by the state. The customer who ordered the legal weed must sign for the delivery.

CANN-ADJACENT: Finding success in marijuana without selling weed

Watch a video below to learn about a Sayreville mom who plans to get into the marijuana delivery business.

The proposed amendments are more complicated for the employees or businesses looking to make marijuana deliveries.

Any dispensary or vendor making deliveries would be required to keep a log with the date, time, name of delivery person, weight of marijuana, strain information and customer signature. And the business must also keep an accounting of the entire delivery fleet, including make, model, color and license plate information.

All crashes must be reported to the state.

And at all times, the delivery person — either a dispensary employee or vendor at least 18 years old — must carry:

A cellphone used to contact the dispensary.

A GPS device, bringing it with them while walking to the customer's doorstep.

Special identification and copy of the delivery order, made available to any police officer or regulator who asks for it.

According to the proposed amendments, the marijuana must be stored in a secured lockbox in a secure cargo area of the delivery vehicle. The vehicle can't have markings on it advertising what it's being used to deliver — which means no pot leaves or green crosses painted on the door.

During the delivery, the vehicle must stick to its route, traveling from the dispensary to one or more customers before returning to the dispensary. The only off-route stops allowed are for refueling, repair, rest or delays due to weather or road hazards.

No cap on dispensaries, but 'micro' licenses added

Previous versions of the proposed New Jersey legal weed bill included a hard cap on the number of marijuana dispensaries, ranging anywhere from 80 to 400 locations.

But the proposed amendments don't mention any specific number, simply stating that all decisions regarding retail marijuana dispensary licenses would be handled by the New Jersey Cannabis Regulatory Commission, formed within the Health Department.

RELATED: Minority activists want fair share of NJ legal weed market

MORE: How to get a dispensary license in cutthroat cannabis market

Instead, the proposed amendments include a breakdown of how licenses should be awarded, with a focus on awarding licenses to minorities, women and disabled veterans, as well as dispensary applicants looking to open in or hire employees living in "impact zones" with high unemployment rates.

Also included is a measure mandating that 10 percent of licenses for dispensaries, grow facilities and processing facilities go to "microbusinesses," which operate at a smaller scale. With a microbusiness license, a dispensary could acquire only 2,000 pounds of cannabis per month, and a cultivator could only grow cannabis on a 5,000-square-foot area.

RELATED: 3 paths legal weed in New Jersey can take

Shop and smoke

The proposed amendment details rules governing "cannabis consumption areas," where dispensary customers can consume the products they've just purchased or brought with them.

The cannabis consumption area could be in a separate area within the dispensary or outside, though fences or barriers are required so that marijuana consumption isn't in public view.

Dispensary applicants looking to operate a cannabis consumption area would have to seek additional state and local approval if the proposed amendments are approved and signed into law.

Mike Davis; @byMikeDavis: 732-643-4223; mdavis@gannettnj.com