With millions of dollars in medical marijuana proceeds — all cash — being moved across Pennsylvania monthly in unmarked cars, state banking regulators have appealed to leaders in the U.S. Congress to create protections for financial institutions so that banks and credit unions might serve the state cannabis industry.
Gov. Tom Wolf's administration on Friday sent a letter making the request to Congress' top leaders: U.S. Reps. Paul Ryan, R.-Wis., and Nancy Pelosi, D-Ca. and U.S. Sens. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.
"We urge Congress to consider legislation that creates a safe harbor for financial institutions to serve a state-compliant business, or entrusts sovereign states with the full oversight and jurisdiction of marijuana-related activity," states the letter from Pa. Secretary of Banking and Securities Robin Wiessmann. State banking officials from Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Louisiana, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon and Washington State also signed the letter.
The federal government considers marijuana illegal, although 31 states and Washington D.C. have legalized the drug for either medical or adult recreation use.
The handful of institutions that provide service to the marijuana industry are at constant risk of federal prosecution, asset forfeiture or criminal penalties.
"The well-documented conflict between federal and state law creates barriers for banks desiring to serve businesses involved in state-licensed marijuana activities," said Wiessmann. "This has resulted in regulatory and legal risk . and created a 'cash and carry' industry."
Currently about 70 percent of all American "plant touching" marijuana businesses - growers and dispensaries - lack bank accounts. Nearly 50 percent of ancillary service providers also are without a financial institution, according to Philadelphia-based cannabis banking attorney Steve Schain.
Fewer than 0.03 percent of the nearly 12,000 U.S. financial institutions are willing to bank marijuana money, said Schain, citing his own research. The upshot: marijuana-related businesses conduct all transactions in cash, including paying employees, rent, taxes and vendors.