Democrats’ divisions could still derail infrastructure bills

Joe Biden’s economic vision has taken a major step toward becoming reality after the US Senate passed two infrastructure measures, but widening political divisions within the Democratic party could yet derail the entire legislative package.

The Senate last week advanced a sprawling $3.5tn budget blueprint for “soft” infrastructure projects to tackle climate change and health care, a day after approving a $1tr bipartisan infrastructure bill to rebuild the nation’s crumbling roads and bridges.

But even as Senate Democrats congratulated themselves on pushing through both measures, the fate of Biden’s economic priorities rests on House Democrats clearing several more looming hurdles as well as uniting the party’s left and right.

The challenges facing the two infrastructure measures reflects the difficulty in trying to force bipartisan compromise in a deeply divided House and Senate where the Democrats possess only narrow majorities.

Liberal Democrats who have bristled at seeing their top climate and social priorities jettisoned as Biden sought an elusive bipartisan compromise with moderate Senate Republicans may seek to change elements of the package, which could upend the delicate legislation.

At a minimum, progressives have insisted the House delay considering the bipartisan infrastructure bill until the Senate passes a far larger climate and health bill – something not expected until the fall, and against the hopes of centrist House Democrats.

In order to deliver the president’s agenda, Democrats are pursuing a two-track approach that involves Congress passing both measures, starting with the $1tn bipartisan compromise that funnels $550bn of new money into traditional infrastructure projects.

The second half of the strategy involves the House and Senate passing the climate and health bill, crafted on the basis of the $3.5tn budget blueprint, and passed using reconciliation, a fast-track process that allows Democrats to bypass a Republican filibuster – a procedural convention that can derail legislation.

The Democrats’ plan is backstopped by a commitment from the speaker, Nancy Pelosi, that the House will not take up the bipartisan infrastructure bill until the Senate first passes the reconciliation bill, which will take weeks to hammer out in the 50-50 Senate.

The move by Pelosi is aimed at trying to balance the competing demands between progressives demanding maximum spending and more fiscally conservative centrists – all while ensuring that both measures are in the end enacted.

When the speaker navigated through a similar two-track strategy to approve the Affordable Care Act under President Barack Obama in 2010, the bill passed notwithstanding the defections of three Democrats in the Senate and three dozen in the House.

Pelosi now holds such a razor-thin majority in the House that she can afford only three Democratic defections to pass the bipartisan bill and the reconciliation bill if the votes are along party lines. Protest votes from either faction could sink the entire effort.

But growing discontent about the legislation on both sides on Capitol Hill signals the prospect of an even more bitter and protracted intra-party fight over the future of the legislation in the coming weeks and months.

The speaker on Wednesday reaffirmed her position to House Democrats during a closed-door caucus meeting that the Senate would have to first pass the $3.5tr reconciliation bill before the House would move to consider the bipartisan bill.

“The votes in the House and Senate depend on us having both bills,” Pelosi told House Democrats, referencing the thin majorities in both chambers, according to a source familiar with the speaker’s remarks.

That means the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, will need his committee chairs to finalize the language for the reconciliation bill and gain the approval of centrist Senate Democrats Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin before the House can proceed.

In an added complication, both Sinema and Manchin have sounded the alarm in recent days over the cost of the $3.5tr budget blueprint that will guide the reconciliation bill, though they joined their colleagues in voting to allow the framework to pass.

The possibility that Democrats could get both the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the reconciliation bill has outraged Republicans, who have vowed to try to derail the $3.5tr package, which Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell likened to a “reckless tax-and-spending spree”.

Challenges in the House also returned on Friday after a group of nine House Democratic moderates threatened in a letter to vote against the $3.5tn budget blueprint when the House returns the week of 23 August, if Pelosi didn’t pass the bipartisan bill first.

The missive called on the speaker to abandon her two-track timetable so members vulnerable in 2022 could sell the bill to voters. “We will not consider voting for a budget resolution until the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act passes the House and is signed into law,” the nine moderates wrote in a letter, which a House Democratic leadership aide described as “highly problematic”.

Threats from moderates have infuriated progressive Democrats, who, emboldened by their successful effort to twist the Biden administration to introduce a new eviction moratorium, have repeatedly warned House Democratic leaders not to deviate from their original plan.

In a letter to Pelosi on Tuesday, the leaders of the Congressional Progressive Caucus said a poll of their 96 members confirmed a majority would withhold their support for the bipartisan infrastructure bill until the Senate passed the reconciliation bill.

White House officials have said that they remain closely attuned to the growing tensions in the House and Senate. Pelosi and Biden speak regularly, and aides have started holding thrice-weekly conference calls, according to sources familiar with the matter.

But top Democrats in Congress see no alternative to the path they are headed down and are hopeful that the two-track strategy will prove successful as in 2010. “I am very pleased to report that the two-track strategy is right on track,” Schumer said.

MI Is Second 'Slowest Growing' State, Detroit Population Falls, West MI Sees Surge

Michigan ranked second in the country for "slowest growing" population in the initial 2020 U.S. Census data, with Detroit's population dropping by 10.5% over the last decade, according to numbers released today.
From April 2010 to April 2020, Michigan's population grew by nearly 2%. However, other Midwest states experienced population jumps of more than 2% during the same time period. Wisconsin grew by 3.6%, Ohio by 2.3% and Indiana by 4.7%.

In Detroit, the population plunged from 713,777 in 2010 to 639,111 in 2020, marking the seventh consecutive decade of the city's population decline. Flint's population fell by 20.7% from 102,434 residents in 2010 to 81,252 in 2020, while also still remaining Michigan's seventh most populous cities.

Ultimately, 52% of all United States counties now have smaller populations.

As for the state's most populous counties, Wayne County's population fell by 1.5%, Macomb County bounced by 4.8%, Oakland County increased by nearly 6% and West Michigan experienced a unique surge of residents.

"It's heartening to see strong and continuing growth in Oakland County with the Census numbers showing 72,033 more people living here than in 2010," said Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter in a statement. "Oakland County's population has grown every 10 years and our economic strength, status as a welcoming county and exceptional quality of life contribute to that expansion."

Other metro areas across the country had a 9% population growth from 2010 to 2020, meaning 86% of American citizens resided within these areas in comparison to 85% in 2010.

But when it came to Detroit -- where the U.S. Census data showed there were merely 254,000 occupied households -- Mayor Mike Duggan emphasized that the shortcomings were the product of an inaccurate count.

In October 2020, Duggan and U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Detroit) described the Bureau's counting efforts as "deficient and (haphazard-ous)," as the city was providing a self-response rate of 51%, the lowest of any American city where more than 500,000 individuals resided.

"This is exactly what Rep. Tlaib and I predicted on (Oct. 28) when we were joined by Census workers who shared their stories about how Detroit neighborhoods were being undercounted and were upset that the count was shut down a month before originally planned," Duggan said in a press release.

He said the Detroit-headquartered DTE Electric Co. recorded nearly 280,000 residential households have been currently paying electric bills.

"At a minimum, the Census somehow failed to count 25,000 occupied houses with running electricity," Duggan said. "It appears the Census Bureau has undercounted Detroit's population by at least 10%. We will be pursuing our legal remedies to get Detroit an accurate count."

Four of Michigan's counties to receive the most positive population changes were along and near the state's western lakeshore, including 12.3% for Ottawa County, 9.5% for Grand Traverse County, 9.2% for Kent County and 8.2% for Allegan County.

Bridge Michigan described the peak in residents as West Michigan reversing the Chicago exodus, which occurred when Kent County lost more than 600 recent college graduates to Cook County, Illinois from 2000 to 2009.

However, the article shared that Greater Grand Rapids gained more than twice as many people from the Chicago Metropolitan Area than what it lost in the previous decade.

While Kent County hosted its 9.2% spike, Cook County had a 1.6% boost.

Early estimations from the U.S. Census Bureau showed West Michigan growing upward by 6.3%, Central Michigan by 2%, Southwest Michigan by 1.7%, the Northern Lower Peninsula by 1.5% and Southeast Michigan by .1%.

However, the Thumb and Lake Huron Shore region was anticipated to drop by 4.4% and the Upper Peninsula by 4.9%.

Five of the state's six fastest shrinking counties are located in the U.P -- Luce County with a 19.5% drop, Ontonagon County by 14.2%, Gogebic County by 12.5% and Baraga and Alger counties both by 7.9%.

Finally, Michigan is also growing in terms of diversity, with the fastest growing demographic in the state being individuals who describe themselves as belonging to two or more races -- a demographic that spiked by 404,996 residents to now equating to 6.3% of the population from 2.3% in 2010.

Although Michigan's African American population -- both those identifying solely as African American and within a combination -- remained at 15.2% of the state's population from 2010 to 2020, Hispanic and Latino residents grew from 4.4% to 5.6% of the population.

Asian-American residents also went from making up 3% to 4.3% of Michigan's population. 

MRA Undergoing Latest Rule Adjustments As Industry Still Taking Shape

The marijuana industry is constantly evolving in Michigan with the agency in charge of its regulation putting forth more rule adjustments related to statutory changes and clarifications following a set of consolidated rules last year to bring the medical and recreational markets closer together.

Track Executive Director Andrew Brisbo in a recent interview noted consolidation rules were first put forward last year as the agency wanted to bring the medical and recreational industries under the same umbrella.

"This is still an evolving industry so we expected to be under constant evaluation for the rules and making adjustments where we saw the need for that," he said.

On September 27, 2021, the MRA will hold its public hearing on 10 rule seats dealing with: disciplinary proceedings (MOAHR 2020-117), hearings (MOAHR 2020-118), infused and edible products (MOAHR 2020-119), licenses (MOAHR 2020-120 and MOAHR 2020-121), operations (MOAHR 2020-122), sales and transfers (MOAHR 2020-123), sampling and testing (MOAHR 2020-124), employees (MOAHR 2020-110), and declaratory rulings (MOAHR 2020-029).

After the consolidated rules were adopted last year, Mr. Brisbo said the real-world effect showed where changes might need to be made. There are also statutory changes that facilitate rule changes, he said.

Additionally, a racial task force convened and had some suggestions related to microbusinesses – a recreational license type that allows one entity to grow, process and sell marijuana products in small quantities – with a version ending up in the new rule set.

"We did come up with something in the draft that I think addresses some of the concerns we heard," Mr. Brisbo said, adding the agency did not make the exact change the task force recommended.

The proposed rules would expand the number of plants allowed and loosen the restriction against processing to help licensees save money and reduce start-up costs. Businesses could source from other processors under the rule.

Other changes include clarity on those employed by multiple marijuana licensees. There is a statutory restriction in an individual having ownership interest in more than one facility and the rules are less clear on those who are employees.

"It is more about working in two places where there is a specific statutory distinction and the need for … checks and balances," Mr. Brisbo said.

The rules will also expand on limited contact or contactless transactions, which were sparked by the coronavirus pandemic. Many retailers provided curbside service, and there were others interested in drive-thru transactions.

"We were trying to look at that concept of low contact point of sale more holistically," Mr. Brisbo said.

Mr. Brisbo said the rules include certain requirements like ensuring age verification, security, the person receiving the product is the person who ordered, and as long as the approach meets those criteria, it would be allowed.


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Marijuana News, Updates, & Articles of Interest

THE DCD MARIJUANA TEAM:  YOUR COMPETITIVE EDGE
DCD continues to exist as the premier resource helping municipalities navigate the waters of cannabis policy. We would be more than happy to answer any questions you may have regarding medical or recreational cannabis policy, procedure, and more. DCD is available for presentations to municipal boards, for one-on-one meetings, and for consultations.

We are here to help you with: municipal lobbying, license application writing and assistance, business plans, state required operations manuals and compliance, facility design, corporate structure, and design and branding. 

We are experts in both medical and recreational cannabis policy and have been in the space for over ten years.  We welcome any opportunity to work with you in the future! 


ARTICLES OF CANNABIS INTEREST:

Three drug raids couldn’t stop growing Michigan marijuana business

How to detect, eliminate common fire hazards in cannabis cultivation operations

Marijuana legalization on the Ohio ballot next year? What it could mean politically: Capitol Letter

With recreational marijuana legalized in many states, companies rethinking drug testing policies

Michigan’s marijuana tax revenue funds $20M studies on medical cannabis for veterans with PTSD 


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