U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter and three other congressmen who’ve been pushing to give cannabis businesses access to banking services expressed hope Tuesday their bill would move through the Senate soon.

In a letter sent to Mike Crapo, chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, the Arvada Democrat and Reps. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio, Denny Heck, D-Wash., and Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, addressed the chairman’s concerns about the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act while urging him to take swift action.

In his comments published Dec. 18, Crapo recommended adding public health and safety requirements to the legislation, such as requiring potency disclosures and a potential 2% THC limit on products before allowing banks to do business with cannabis companies, and rules for preventing “bad actors” from laundering money through banks.

The representatives were hesitant to expand the scope of the bill, stating “we should exercise caution before adding limitations on the legislation’s safe harbor that impose unworkable burdens on financial institutions.”

“Our bill is about public safety,” the congressmen wrote. “It does not change the legal status of marijuana and is focused solely on taking cash off the streets and aligning federal banking laws with the decisions states are already making regarding cannabis.”

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser and five other attorneys general echoed that sentiment in a separate letter to the Senate sent Wednesday, stating “the SAFE Banking Act is a narrowly tailored solution that would provide immediate public safety benefits without supporting expansion of the existing cannabis industry.”

Burglaries of cannabis dispensaries and grow operations in Denver hit a three-year high in 2019. Many in the industry believe criminals target these businesses because they are forced to deal in cash.

Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner, the Republican co-sponsoring the SAFE Banking Act in the Senate, said he has had numerous discussions with Crapo about the bill, and looks forward to working toward its passage.

“It’s no secret that I, too, was opposed to marijuana legalization in Colorado,” Gardner said in a statement. “But the people of Colorado chose to try a new approach to legal cannabis, and the sky is not falling. Seven years later, 95% of the United States’ population lives in a state with some form of legal cannabis. Every day that Congress continues to ignore reality, unintended negative consequences pile up for legitimate businesses — both in the cannabis industry and outside it.”

The SAFE Banking Act passed the U.S. House of Representatives in September by a vote of 321-103.

“This is a constructive step forward for our legislative effort and an important step toward making our communities safer,” the congressmen’s letter concludes. “We stand ready to partner with you and your colleagues, and we look forward to continued progress on this issue.”

Story updated at 3 p.m., Jan. 23 to provide a new statement about the SAFE Banking Act from the Colorado Attorney General.