Veterans in cannabis industry denied VA home loans

Shannon Corbeil
Apr 29, 2020 3:52 PM PDT
1 minute read
Air Force photo

SUMMARY

Veterans in the cannabis industry have been denied home loans from the Department of Veterans Affairs, prompting a response from Congress. When one veteran was denied his home loan benefit, he reached out to Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Massachuse…

Veterans in the cannabis industry have been denied home loans from the Department of Veterans Affairs, prompting a response from Congress.

When one veteran was denied his home loan benefit, he reached out to Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Massachusetts), who joined with 20 members of Congress in writing to VA Secretary Robert Wilkie.

The lawmakers wanted to know why their constituents were denied loans after citing their income sources as state-legalized cannabis activities.

"Denying veterans the benefits they've earned...is contrary to the intent Congress separately demonstrated in its creation of VA benefit programs," Clark wrote in her May 23, 2019 letter.


Read the letter:

In the letter, shared with Roll Call, Clark stated, "A substantial number of veterans earn their livelihoods in this industry and, in coming years, that number is likely to further rise. The VA must acknowledge this reality and ensure veterans who work in this sector are able to clearly understand and can equitably access the benefits they've earned."

She also acknowledged that "the ambiguity under which the cannabis industry operates is unique, and we fully understand the VA's resulting aversion to legal and financial risk. [However]...in recent years, the Department of Justice has substantially narrowed its prosecutorial priorities in this area, and Congress has taken action to prevent federal interference with the implementation of state cannabis laws."

More: Time to slay the myth around the magical unicorn called the 'VA Loan'

Though Marijuana remains a Schedule 1 drug, illegal under federal law, Military.com points out that "thirty-four states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands now have some variation of medical marijuana programs, while a dozen other states allow cannabidiol that is low in tetrahydrocannabinol — or THC, the psychoactive component of pot that makes a user high — for medicinal purposes."

U.S. Marine Corps veteran Dan Anglin, CEO of CannAmerica, was also denied a VA home loan due to his work in the cannabis industry — and he's not afraid to speak out about it.

[facebook https://www.facebook.com/NowThisWeed/videos/388914385089016/?v=388914385089016 expand=1]Veteran Dan Anglin Denied Home Loans Due to Owning a Cannabis Company

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Veteran Dan Anglin speaks out

Also read: Why this Army vet ditched pills for cannabis and yoga

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