Metro

New Jersey is one step closer to making legal weed a reality

It was a joint effort to open pot shops faster.

Legal weed is one step closer to becoming a reality in the Garden State following an agreement reached this week between Gov. Phil Murphy’s office and a key legislator — and the measure could be voted on as early as Monday.

State Sen. Nicholas Scutari agreed to remove a provision in the proposed bill that sought to limit the number of licenses to grow marijuana, The Post has learned.

Under the current bill, co-sponsored by Scutari and Sen. Stephen Sweeney, the number of licenses is limited to 28 in the first 18 months of legal sales.

“In a perfect world, I don’t think we need caps anymore,” the Democrat, who represents Union, told NJ.com.

The Garden State has 12 licensed medical operators who must grow, process and distribute pot. Scutari’s change would allow different businesses to handle those processes under different types of licenses.

“This is going to be a stranglehold on the production of product,” Scutari said of continued caps. “We can’t hold the whole industry hostage.”

The legislation was also amended to add a social equity tax of $10 per $350 ounce of weed to support communities of color crushed by the war on drugs.

The tax dollars will likely go to startup grants, low-interest loans and job training programs for minority groups and veterans of color— but the bill doesn’t specify which geographic areas would benefit.

“[It’s] an extremely important step forward: a social equity excise tax that will fund financial reparations for communities of color devastated by the drug war. This provision represents a hard fought victory in the fight for racial justice in the state of New Jersey,” Rev. Charles Boyer, of the Salvation and Social Justice, said Thursday.

But the bill still lacks “firm, codified language” that guarantees tax dollars go to “impact zones” with high incarceration rates for low-level marijuana-based crimes.

The Assembly and the Senate will have hearings on the bill, S-21, on Thursday and each could vote on Monday.

But it wasn’t yet clear if the lower chamber would support the change, NJ.com reported.

“The Assembly continues to negotiate the final points of the legislation,” Kevin McArdle, spokesman for Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, told the publication.

The state Legislature has been busy fine-tuning S-21 after it passed by a ballot measure earlier this month.

Last week, the bill was amended to soften penalties for a small possession of magic mushrooms.

S-21 would decriminalize possession of up to 6 ounces of marijuana, the highest threshold in the country.