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Nebraska Lawmakers Advance Governor’s Medical Cannabis Commission Appointees Who Opposed Legalization

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“I don’t think an arsonist should be in charge of the fire department.”

By Zach Wendling, Nebraska Examiner

A legislative committee on Thursday advanced the governor’s two appointees to the Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission, but just one secured the committee’s support before heading to the full Legislature.

The roughly three-hour confirmation hearing and 15-minute executive session to consider and vote on the appointments came just 48 hours after the defeat of Legislative Bill 677 to provide additional guardrails to the commission. That bill sought to aid implementation of the voter-approved laws and delay a July 1 deadline for rules and regulations to be in place.

Gov. Jim Pillen (R), who opposed the ballot measures legalizing and regulating medical cannabis, appointed Dr. Monica Oldenburg of Lincoln, an anesthesiologist, and Lorelle Mueting of Gretna, prevention director at Heartland Family Service in Omaha, to the commission.

The General Affairs Committee voted 5-2, with one member “present, not voting,” to recommend Oldenburg but tied 4-4 on favorably advancing Mueting.

Under legislative rules, all gubernatorial appointments reach the full Legislature anyway. Committees can recommend to approve or reject an appointment, or lawmakers can make no recommendation, which happens in the event of a tie.

Either appointee would need 25 votes to be confirmed to a six-year term. They would join the members of the Liquor Control Commission, whom voters also placed on the Medical Cannabis Commission: Bruce Bailey of Lincoln, Harry Hoch Jr. of Omaha and Kim Lowe of Kearney. Liquor commissioners, too, are appointees of the governor. Hoch’s term ends Saturday.

Appointee backgrounds

Mueting said her role as a prevention specialist for 24 years has been to prevent people from having problems with alcohol and other substances. She said she has looked at medical cannabis from a “360-degree view,” and as a self-described “solutions-focused” person, she said she views the Nebraska medical laws as helping patients with “debilitating” health conditions.

“Helping to guide the rulemaking process around the needs of the people it’s intended to serve is my goal,” Mueting said. “There’s nothing about that goal that says we need to sacrifice public health and safety to attain it.”

Mueting has a psychology and health promotion management degree from Hastings College and has a master’s degree in kinesiology from Kansas State University.

Oldenburg said she is “not a prohibitionist” of cannabis but is “pro-research.” She said cannabis has “a place in pain management” for certain ailments that cause suffering.

“Nebraska needs to seize the opportunity to be slow and deliberate in the manner in which we determine how best to designate appropriate conditions for medical cannabis and regulate those entities that will dispense medical cannabis in our state,” Oldenburg said. “I look forward to working with various parties to ensure that we in the State of Nebraska get this right.”

Oldenburg graduated from the University of Dallas with a degree in biochemistry and chemistry before getting her medical degree from Creighton University. She has been an anesthesiologist for 18 years, first in Colorado and returning to Nebraska in 2017 with her family.

Part of the move, she said, was because of how the “evolution” of medicinal to recreational marijuana went in Colorado. She said there weren’t many medical regulations at the start.

Pillen has described the women as “experienced, well-qualified individuals” who would ensure strong regulations “to the letter of the law the people of Nebraska enacted.” He and other LB 677 opponents, such as State Sen. Jared Storm of David City, say the commission can meet its July 1 deadline.

Oldenburg declined to talk with the Nebraska Examiner prior to the Thursday hearing. Mueting did not respond to repeated requests for comment before or after the hearing.

Committee member ties

Of the appointees, Oldenburg said she was encouraged to apply by Storm, a member of the General Affairs Committee, who called and asked if she had considered the position.

Mueting listed Storm as a personal reference on her application to the governor. Under legislative questioning, Mueting at first said she didn’t know “exactly how the governor got my name” before clarifying she applied. She said she didn’t know appointments would go before the General Affairs Committee, just that full legislative approval was needed in the end.

During the closed-door executive session, which is open to reporters, Storm defended the appointees and said they showed up for a hostile and intimidating environment.

State Sen. Victor Rountree of Bellevue spoke for the first time to criticize what he viewed as a conflict of interest. Storm said the application process was public and flipped the question on Rountree and other committee members for not reaching out to possible applicants, too.

In addition to Mueting and Oldenburg, Pillen interviewed Erin Bone, a prevention specialist in North Platte. The governor did not interview a fourth applicant: Ogallala City Manager Kevin Wilkins, according to records shared with the Examiner.

Mueting and Oldenburg are registered Republicans. Bone is a registered Democrat. Wilkins is a registered nonpartisan.

During Tuesday’s debate on LB 677, Storm acknowledged he had talked with Mueting but said he hadn’t talked about the bill with Mueting.

Mueting, when she testified against LB 677 in March, answered questions from Storm about what she’d like to see from medical cannabis in Nebraska. Her answer included limiting allowable forms of cannabis (not smoking or vaping), limiting qualifying conditions and placing restrictions on tetrahydrocannabidiol potency, serving size or servings per package in cannabis products.

Mueting was “neutral” on a Storm bill, LB 483, to reduce the allowable possession down to 300 milligrams, 0.21 percent of what voters approved, and only allow pills or tinctures for the medicine.

Need for neutrality?

Much of Thursday’s hearing focused on opposition to the appointments because Oldenburg and Mueting have both consistently opposed the legislative proposals that long-time medical cannabis advocates in Nebraska have supported in the Legislature.

Oldenburg testified against proposals in 2018, 2019 and 2021, while Mueting opposed legislation in 2019, 2021, 2023 and 2025.

After more than a decade of legislative attempts, advocates succeeded last fall by ballot measure at legalizing up to 5 ounces of medical cannabis with a health care practitioner’s recommendation. “Exclusive” regulatory authority is vested in the Medical Cannabis Commission, per voter directive.

Crista Eggers, executive director of Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana, which led the campaign, said the appointments seemed like a “calculated act” by Pillen. She said lawmakers have an “ethical responsibility” to approve individuals committed to the program’s success, “not its obstruction.”

“I don’t think an arsonist should be in charge of the fire department,” Eggers testified.

Cavanaugh asked whether that meant Eggers should be appointed. She said, “Absolutely not.”

“I do not believe that this commission should be made up of anyone that has spent time, energy, in their personal or professional capacity, being opposed or supportive to this,” Eggers said.

‘Derail, stall and sabotage’

Shelly Gillen of Bellevue, testifying on behalf of her 23-year-old son Will, said that for people “enamored” with requiring U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval first—as has been the consistent policy for Mueting’s Heartland Family Service—Gillen said those people should ask what FDA-approved meds have done to Will Gillen, making him “an innocent, unintentional addict.”

“We were told by a neurologist that weaning him off one of his meds would be similar to weaning off someone on heroin. FDA-approved meds landed him in the hospital for two weeks in complete somnolence that made him develop pneumonia and silent aspiration on his own saliva,” Gillen testified.

The Gillens were among the first families to consistently fight for medical cannabis, back to 2015 legislation from former State Sen. Sue Crawford of Bellevue. Mueting supported that bill.

Gillen said there was “no doubt in my mind” that the appointees would “do everything they can to derail, stall and sabotage access to medical cannabis for as many patients as possible.”

Angelica Marsaglia of Lincoln, who would benefit from medical cannabis, opposed both appointees and noted Mueting is part of an organization in part to help addicts. Marsaglia urged senators to see patients and “please hear us.”

“We are not addicts. We are medical patients,” Marsaglia said. “We just want access to a plant, a plant that grows freely and only the government has made illegal.”

Law enforcement angle

Maggie Ballard and Mary O’Neill, both of Heartland Family Service, defended Mueting, as did Sarpy County Sheriff Greg London.

London attested to Mueting’s character and integrity and said she’s “perfect” for the appointment because she understands the importance of rules and regulations. London was one of 53 sheriffs to join Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers in opposition to LB 677.

The AG’s Office has vowed to sue the Medical Cannabis Commission if it begins licensing medical cannabis dispensaries, which could begin by October 1 under the laws.

Advisement to law enforcement is still a “work in progress” when it comes to medical cannabis, London said, and he argued no one has a medical cannabis recommendation card yet.

Cavanaugh said some people do have a card, to which London asked how many.

“I’ve met at least one,” Cavanaugh said.

“Oh. Congratulations,” London responded.

Keith County Attorney Randy Fair, in his personal capacity, said that while both appointees may be very good people, he said appointees should be neutral-minded individuals who can support good regulations.

Fair said that cops will do the same thing they do now during traffic stops: Pull people over now if they smell marijuana for probable cause, search vehicles and issue arrests or tickets if people have more than 5 ounces of marijuana, or not if someone has a recommendation.

“We don’t try to arrest tons of people for that because, quite frankly, it would be a waste of resources,” Fair said. “I do think that a lot of these concerns are blown over.”

It would be Fair’s “ethical duty,” he said, not to prosecute someone unless they have actually violated the laws of Nebraska.

‘One of the biggest hearts’

Ballard said she’s served on Heartland Family Service’s prevention team with Mueting for 11 of Ballard’s 13 years with the organization. When learning that there might have been an overflow room because of widespread opposition, Ballard said, “Honestly, that hurts my heart.”

While Mueting and Ballard have different backgrounds and don’t see eye-to-eye on everything, Ballard added, Mueting “has one of the biggest hearts of anyone I’ve ever met.”

“I just can’t think of anyone better than her to serve on this commission, because she will do a very good job of balancing public health and public safety against people who need help with their debilitating conditions,” Ballard said.

Ballard and Mueting said voters have spoken, despite the Heartland Family Service position. Ballard said her coworker’s job would be to oversee and “try to do things as well as possible and not to just bang her head against the wall saying, ‘No, we can’t do this here.’”

“That’s not practical, and it’s not in Lorelle’s nature either,” Ballard continued.

Nothing in the law requires “debilitating” conditions, Cavanaugh noted. Any health care practitioner, including out-of-state, can recommend cannabis if they feel a patient could benefit.

‘I don’t have the power’

While no one spoke in favor of Oldenburg’s appointment, multiple senators said after the hearing that they were impressed with her credentials. State Sen. Stan Clouse of Kearney, who opposed Mueting but supported Oldenburg, said there were some unfair shots taken at Oldenburg whose skill set he highlighted. He did not specify his reservations on Mueting’s appointment.

State Sen. Bob Andersen of north-central Sarpy County said he was “very impressed” by Mueting’s 24 years in the prevention field and that she was qualified for the role.

Mueting said she didn’t view her appointment as trying to “squash” the law, “because I don’t have the power to do that.”

“My goal is not to make this harder for people,” Mueting said. “My goal is to put some rules around the substance as we were given in statute.”

Oldenburg noted that in residency, she was taught to never be afraid of prescribing opioids for patients’ pain, but that’s changed. She added that Nebraska can learn from other states in the interest of health, safety and well-being for a better program.

Multiple opponents of the appointees, including Angela Cornett of Norfolk, a nurse, said patients were tired of waiting, including for new research. Cornett said her mom was one of dozens of advocates who died waiting for possible relief over the past decade.

Oldenburg stayed for the whole hearing, but Mueting left after her invited witnesses testified. State Sen. Rick Holdcroft of Bellevue said she had a previously scheduled appointment.

‘Obligation to protect society’

Cavanaugh grilled both appointees over what they view as the commission’s role, such as whether commissioners should list qualifying conditions, limit permissible forms of using cannabis, restrict how many dispensaries can be licensed and more.

Mueting and Oldenburg, noting they are “one of five” on the commission, said they didn’t know and weren’t attorneys. They said they would seek guidance as a team, though both said they opposed smoking as a form of using cannabis.

“I’m a law-abiding citizen of the State of Nebraska, and I have to follow the will of the people, and I have to follow the statutes,” Oldenburg said.

Andersen, who also opposed LB 677, criticized Cavanaugh’s line of questioning about Mueting’s personal views on medical cannabis and compared it to asking a public defender whether a client is guilty.

“They’re going to do a job and defend the person,” Andersen said.

“That’s a really good analogy,” Mueting responded.

Storm said that at the end of the day, he and others want to help Nebraskans in the right way.

“If cannabis can help people with ailments, we should do that, very much should do that,” Storm said. “But we have an obligation to protect society, and we can’t let this get out of control.”

This story was first published by Nebraska Examiner.

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New Bipartisan Pennsylvania Bill Would Create Marijuana Regulatory Board Ahead Of Possible Adult-Use Legalization

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Bipartisan Pennsylvania senators have introduced a bill to create a new regulatory body in the state that would begin overseeing medical cannabis while preparing to eventually handle the adult-use market as well.

The 52-page legislation is being sponsored by Sen. Dan Laughlin (R), along with 16 other members from both parties. While it wouldn’t legalize adult-use cannabis as the lead sponsor has supported, it would establish a regulatory infrastructure that could be used to oversee such a program.

Laughlin, who has sponsored legalization bills in the past, previewed the new measure in May, writing that Pennsylvania should first take steps to make sure the state is “ready to act when legalization becomes law” by establishing a Cannabis Control Board (CCB) now.

“Legalization of adult-use cannabis in Pennsylvania is no longer a matter of if, it is when. And when that day comes, the state should not be scrambling to build a regulatory system from scratch,” he said. “A transparent, efficient framework should already be in place, one designed to support a safe, well-regulated cannabis industry from day one.”

At the time, he indicated that the board would also be responsible for regulating the hemp market under the proposal, but the language of the introduced legislation is somewhat opaque on that component of the cannabis industry.

In a cosponsorship memo, the senator said his bill would “transfer regulatory control of the Medical Marijuana Program to the CCB, ensuring continuity, efficiency, and improved oversight of medical cannabis businesses and patient access.” It would further “establish uniform safety standards to protect consumers from untested and potentially harmful products.”

The bill text itself also doesn’t contain an explicit references to adult-use, or recreational, marijuana, and it would not enact legalization on its own. But the description indicates that the sponsors feel the current regulatory regime under the Pennsylvania Department of Health should be replaced with a more targeted agency that would ostensibly be suited to oversee an adult-use market if lawmakers move to end prohibition.

“By consolidating oversight under a single regulatory board, we can eliminate inconsistencies, enhance transparency, and provide the structure needed to responsibly manage this industry,” the memo says.

Most of the bill describes the process of establishing the CCB, with details about the selection criteria and other procedural information. The duties section of the legislation lists various authorizations for the board, including members’ ability to conduct investigations, promulgate regulations, consult with other departments and more to achieve its oversight goals.

Meanwhile, Sen. Shariff Street (D), one of the original cosponsors of the new bill, said last week that he was working with bipartisan and bicameral lawmakers to develop a passable marijuana legalization measure as the legislature approached Monday’s budget deadline—telling supporters at the time that “we’re getting close” and they shouldn’t “ease up” on the fight.

“There are some basic things that we know we need to have done,” he said. “We need to make sure when we pass a recreational adult-use bill that we seal and expunge the records of all those people who’ve been who’ve had cannabis convictions in the past.”

Street thanked his bipartisan colleagues in the House—including Reps. Emily Kinkead (D), Abby Major (R) and Amen Brown (D), who have championed their own legalization proposals—for working with the Senate “in a collaborative way.”

“We have a good core group of us who’ve been working to move this bill—to move this concept forward—and I think we’re gonna get it done,” he said. “We need your voices to stay engaged. We need to stay involved.”

Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R) recently said marijuana legalization would not be included in the 2026 budget as lawmakers approached the deadline he expected they would miss. But Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) is still holding out hope that negotiators can “get it done.”

Legislators appear to be at an impasse on certain key issues, including the governor’s request to legalize adult-use cannabis via the legislation. Pittman said he doesn’t see a path forward for the reform on that schedule, however.

Shapiro, on the other hand, hasn’t quite thrown in the towel, saying at a press briefing earlier last month that “we all understand we have to compromise” on a number of issues to reach a budget agreement.

Pittman, for his part, criticized House lawmakers for passing a marijuana legalization bill that would have involved state-run shops. The legislation was quickly rejected by a Senate committee.

Following that defeat, the governor said he still remained “hopeful” that lawmakers could deliver a reform bill to his desk by a budget deadline at the end of last month—and he urged the GOP-controlled Senate to “put their ideas on the table.”

“We’ve had really good, honest dialogue about it,” the governor, who separately criticized the Senate for abruptly derailing the House marijuana legalization bill, said.

“Look, I think this is an issue of competitiveness,” he said. “Every state around us, with the exception of West Virginia, has gotten it done. You go visit some of these dispensaries along our border—in this case with Maryland, [that] is probably the closest one here. Sixty percent of the people walking into those dispensaries are from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”

Whether Pennsylvania legislators will advance legalization this session remains to be seen. But two Democratic lawmakers—Street and Rep. Rick Krajewski (D)—recently said they’re aiming to reach a compromise and pass reform legislation before the budget deadline.

Also, in May, Sen. Marty Flynn (D) announced his intent to file a new bill to legalize marijuana in the state, calling on colleagues to join him on the measure.

While the House legislation Krajewski sponsored alongside Rep. Dan Frankel (D) was rejected in a Senate committee following its expedited passage through the House along party lines, Street said he’s “cautiously optimistic we’re going to be able to revive the bill and amend it and move forward with a work product that allows us to get a bill on the governor’s desk and realize revenue.”

Following the Senate committee vote, lawmakers from both chambers who support legalization have been trading criticisms about each other’s roles in the stalled push to end prohibition.

Krajewski, for example, recently wrote in a Marijuana Moment op-ed that Senate Republicans who killed his House-passed cannabis legalization bill are “stuck in their prohibitionist views of the past” and are “out of touch with the will of our Commonwealth.”

Prior to that vote, Pennsylvania’s Republican attorney general said that while he doesn’t currently support the House-passed marijuana legalization bill, he’s open to changing his mind about the policy change after continuing to review the details.

For what it’s worth, a recent poll found that Pennsylvania voters say they favor a model where cannabis is sold by licensed private businesses, rather than through a system of state-run stores.

The governor has repeatedly called for adult-use marijuana legalization. However, he hasn’t endorsed the specific idea of having a state-controlled model.

GOP lawmaker Major—who is sponsoring another forthcoming legalization bill that envisions a traditional private sales model alongside Democrat Kinkead—said during the House floor debate on HB 1200 that she stands opposed to the competing bill, emphasizing that she disagrees with the state-run stores proposal.

While Democrats control the House and governor’s office, they will still need to reach a deal with the GOP-controlled Senate to effectuate change. And in addition to the conflicting perspectives among pro-legalization legislators, another potential barrier to reform is exactly that political dynamic.

Regardless of which direction Pennsylvania lawmakers do—or don’t—go on marijuana legalization this session, a survey released in April shows a majority of adults in the state support the reform—and opposition to the policy change has fallen by nearly 50 percent over the last decade.

Kinkead has made the case in another recent interview that legalizing cannabis in Pennsylvania will help the state mitigate public health and safety concerns associated with the illicit market, including the fact that unregulated products can be laced with fentanyl.

The lawmaker previously introduced a separate bipartisan marijuana legalization bill, alongside 15 other cosponsors, last September. It did not advance, however.

Meanwhile, Laughlin recently called for the creation of a state “legacy” fund, using tax revenue from adult-use marijuana sales and gaming to make long-term investments in the Commonwealth’s economy.

The senator argued that, beyond using any resulting tax revenue to fund day-to-day projects and public services, the state should earmark a portion of those tax dollars for a fund to “provide a sustainable source of prosperity that lasts for generations.”

Another GOP Pennsylvania senator, Sen. Gene Yaw (R), is backing the push to legalize marijuana in the commonwealth, pointing out that, historically, prohibition “has not turned out well,” noting the country’s experience with alcohol criminalization.

Pennsylvania House Speaker Joanna McClinton (D) recently said that Democrats are ready to pass a marijuana legalization bill this session, but that the party “will need Republican support” to get the job done—adding that it will be a “heavy lift.”

Polls have shown bipartisan support for legalization among voters, but the reform has consistently stalled in the legislature, owing in large part to GOP opposition. But not all Republican members are against the policy change—and one recently said she felt her party should seize the “opportunity to snatch” the issue from Democrats.

Separately in March, the Pennsylvania House approved a bill sponsored by Frankel that’s meant to strengthen safety standards and oversight of the state’s medical marijuana program as lawmakers work to advance adult-use legalization.

While Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program was enacted nearly a decade ago, lawmakers say the measure, which now heads to the Senate, is necessary to improve testing compliance, product audits and lab inspections, among other aspects of the industry.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Democratic lawmakers recently introduced a bill that would allow farmers and other small agriculture operators to sell marijuana they cultivate to existing growers and and processors if the state moves to legalize adult-use cannabis.

Separately, an independent Pennsylvania agency is projecting more tax dollars to be generated from adult-use marijuana sales compared to what the governor’s office has estimated, although it expects significantly less overall revenue from cannabis legalization due to differing views on licensing fees.

Pennsylvania officials have also launched a new survey that invites legal marijuana businesses across the country to provide information about their operations to help the state better understand the cannabis industry as lawmakers consider enacting adult-use legalization this session.


Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.


Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

Also, in a video interview released in March, the governor emphasized that the state is “losing out” to others that have already enacted adult-use legalization, while maintaining a policy that’s enriched the illicit market.

“I think it’s an issue of freedom and liberty. I mean, if folks want to smoke, they should be able to do so in a safe and legal way,” he said. “We should shut down the black market—and, by the way, every state around us is doing it. Pennsylvanians are driving to those other states and paying taxes in those other states.”

The state’s agriculture secretary separately told lawmakers that he’s fully confident that his department is in a “really good” position to oversee an adult-use marijuana program if lawmakers act.

Meanwhile, in February, top Pennsylvania police and health officials told lawmakers they are prepared to implement marijuana legalization if the legislature moves forward with the reform—and that they stand ready to work together as the details of legislation to achieve it are crafted.

Amid the growing calls for marijuana legalization in Pennsylvania, a GOP state senator said prohibition has been a “disaster,” and a regulated sales model for cannabis—similar to how alcohol and tobacco are handled—could serve as an effective alternative.

A Republican Pennsylvania senator also recently defended the push to legalize and regulate marijuana, calling it “the most conservative stance” on the issue.

New Hampshire Bill To Ease Psilocybin Penalties Advances Through House But Is Tabled In Senate

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House bill would “destroy” hemp industry, GOP senator says (Newsletter: July 1, 2025)

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KY gov: medical marijuana plants “really soon”; Mike Tyson pushes Trump on cannabis; NH psilocybin; SCOTUS marijuana case; Gluten-free hemp baking

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Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) told Marijuana Moment that a bill advancing in the House to ban hemp products with any quantifiable amount of THC would “completely destroy the American hemp industry.”

  • “I don’t know how you’d be able to sell CBD oil with that.”

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) said medical cannabis growers will be “putting seed in the ground really soon” and that he hopes patients get access by the end of the year.

The New Hampshire Senate tabled a bill to lower penalties for first-time psilocybin possession that had narrowly cleared the House of Representatives.

Mike Tyson delivered his marijuana reform message to President Donald Trump in a Fox News appearance—urging him to support rescheduling cannabis and saying its current classification in Schedule I alongside heroin is “ridiculous.”

Doctors for Drug Policy Reform is launching a campaign to empower more physicians and healthcare professionals to join the movement to end the war on drugs—including with a new toolkit on “Transitioning from a Criminal Justice Model of Drug Use to a Health-focused Approach.”

A new study on gluten-free baked goods shows that “hemp oil and hemp flour are viable ingredients for traditional cakes and desserts, notably contributing increased nutritional value through the CBD-enriched hemp oil and the beneficial profile of hemp flour.”

Former U.S. Department of Justice Tax Division Deputy Assistant Attorney General James B. Mann argues in a new Marijuana Moment op-ed that a pending cannabis industry lawsuit has “precisely zero chance of being heard by the Supreme Court.”

Tuesday marks four years since Connecticut’s recreational marijuana legalization law took effect, and here’s a look at how cannabis product sales trends have evolved over that time.

/ FEDERAL

The Drug Enforcement Administration promoted an article about a study on marijuana edibles being appealing to teens.

New Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Deputy Director Mike Davis previously served as chief medical officer for Usona Institute, which works to advance psychedelic science.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) responded to a claim that he has never authored a bill that became law by tweeting, “This is false. My industrial hemp act became law when it was incorporated by a vote of the House as part of the farm bill.”

/ STATES

A Delaware representative discussed the passage of a bill to limit county restrictions on marijuana businesses.

Georgia’s agriculture commissioner announced arrests of suspects in an interstate hemp oil theft case.

An Alabama court is considering a lawsuit seeking to block the state’s hemp restriction law.

A Maryland marijuana tax increase takes effect on Tuesday.

Colorado regulators are taking the first steps toward allowing ibogaine at psychedelic healing centers.

New York regulators published guidance on preempting “unreasonably impracticable” local cannabis laws.

The California State Fair Cannabis Awards announced the winners of this year’s competition.

Ohio regulators are urging people who use marijuana at Fourth of July celebrations to “use good judgment and ensure the safety of those around them.”


Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.


Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

/ LOCAL

Denver, Colorado officials are accepting applications for psychedelic healing center licenses.

/ INTERNATIONAL

Grenada Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell discussed plans to advance marijuana reform legislation.

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said the government will be “absolutely uncompromising toward drug crime” and “will not allow anyone to opaquely finance pro-drug campaigns in our country with external funding to encourage the consumption of marijuana, club drugs and other similar substances.”

/ SCIENCE & HEALTH

A study suggested that cannabis sativa residues “may enhance meat quality and antioxidant defense in broiler chickens.”

A study found that “MDMA combined with supportive therapy for PTSD is safe and effective.”

/ ADVOCACY, OPINION & ANALYSIS

The Marijuana Policy Project is hiring a new executive director.

/ CULTURE

Lorde spoke about how MDMA-assisted therapy “changed the game on my stage fright.”

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Advocacy Organizations Call on Meta to End Censorship of Cannabis and Psychedelic Communities

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In a letter to Meta Platforms, Inc., the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, a group of cannabis and psychedelic advocacy organizations, led by Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), called on the company to end what it describes as “ongoing and disproportionate censorship of content related to cannabis, psychedelics, and harm reduction.”

“Accounts committed to public education, legal and policy advocacy, research dissemination, and harm reduction services — including those of licensed healthcare professionals, nonprofits, and legal businesses — have been routinely shadowbanned, deplatformed, or had their posts removed with little explanation or recourse, despite operating in full compliance with local laws. This suppression is not merely an inconvenience; it is a form of digital marginalization.” — SSDP, in the letter

The groups argue the censorship of cannabis and psychedelics continue amid accelerating overdose deaths and mental health crises, and call on Meta to “end discriminatory bans and shadowbans,” “establish clear, transparent, and consistent content policies that distinguish between promotion of the sale of illegal substances and legitimate drug education and advocacy,” “create a dedicated appeals and accountability process specific to drug-related content that includes community stakeholders and subject-matter experts,” and “engage in regular dialogue with the psychedelic, cannabis, and harm reduction communities to better understand our work and co-create equitable guidelines for content moderation.”

In all, 81 organizations, consisting of students, educators, researchers, advocates, entrepreneurs, and community leaders, joined the letter, calling Meta’s policy “censorship of science, public health, legal, and public policy discourse” and describing the policy as “not an act of neutrality.”

“As the cultural and legal landscapes around these issues evolve,” the letter states, “so too must your policies.”



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New Bipartisan Pennsylvania Bill Would Create Marijuana Regulatory Board Ahead Of Possible Adult-Use Legalization

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House bill would “destroy” hemp industry, GOP senator says (Newsletter: July 1, 2025)

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California's cannabis excise tax to rise to 19% July 1

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Cannabis tax hike and parking rate increase take effect across California and Sacramento

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Thailand starts banning the sale of cannabis without a prescription

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Advocacy Organizations Call on Meta to End Censorship of Cannabis and Psychedelic Communities

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Oceanside moving forward on retail cannabis stores – NBC 7 San Diego

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Florida Removes Nearly 11,000 Hemp Product Packages for Violating Child-Protection Standards

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Nebraska Officials Propose Emergency Medical Cannabis Regulations

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Kentucky Medical Marijuana Growers Will Be ‘Putting Seed In The Ground Really Soon,’ Governor Says

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Marijuana Industry Lawsuit Has ‘Zero Chance’ Of Being Heard By Supreme Court, Former DOJ Lawyer Says (Op-Ed)

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Mike Tyson Tells Trump To Reschedule Marijuana And Free Prisoners In Fox News Appearance

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New Hampshire Bill To Ease Psilocybin Penalties Advances Through House But Is Tabled In Senate

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Honoring LGBTQIA+ Cannabis Trailblazers: A Pride Month Reflection

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Anacostia Organics: Cannabis with care in the capital

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Doctors Group Launches Campaign Empowering More Healthcare Professionals To Join Drug Decriminalization Movement

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Star signs and cannabis strains: July 2025 horoscopes

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Using Hemp Flour And Oil Can Make Gluten-Free Baked Goods With ‘Optimal’ Texture And ‘Significant’ Nutrition, Study Shows

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10 Alabama CBD Stores, Vape Shops Raided; 4 Hemp Businesses Sue State

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Four Arrested for CBD Distillate Theft Valued at $3.6M

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ALEA raids 9 stores across Alabama for allegedly violating state marijuana laws

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Alert: Department of Cannabis Control updates data dashboards with full data for 2023 

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Connecticut Appoints The US’s First Cannabis Ombudsperson – Yes there is a pun in there and I’m Sure Erin Kirk Is Going To Hear It More Than Once!

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5 best CBD creams of 2024 by Leafly

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Free delta-9 gummies from Bay Smokes

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EU initiative begins bid to open access to psychedelic therapies

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New Study Analyzes the Effects of THCV, CBD on Weight Loss

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Mississippi city official pleads guilty to selling fake CBD products

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Curaleaf Start Process Of Getting Their Claws Into The UK’s National Health System – With Former MP (Resigned Today 30/5/24) As The Front Man

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May 2024 Leafly HighLight: Pink Runtz strain

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5 best autoflower seed banks of 2024 by Leafly

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Horn Lake denies cannabis dispensary request to allow sale of drug paraphernalia and Sunday sales | News

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Discover New York’s dankest cannabis brands [September 2024]

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Local medical cannabis dispensary reacts to MSDH pulling Rapid Analytics License – WLBT

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Press Release: CANNRA Calls for Farm Bill to Clarify Existing State Authority to Regulate Hemp Products

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Nevada CCB to Accept Applications for Cannabis Establishments in White Pine County – “Only one cultivation and one production license will be awarded in White Pine County”

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5 best THC drinks of 2024 by Leafly

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The Daily Hit: October 2, 2024

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Weekly Update: Monday, May 13, 2024 including, New Guide for Renewals & May Board meeting application deadline

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People In This State Googled ‘Medical Marijuana’ The Most, Study Shows

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Thailand: Pro-cannabis advocates rally ahead of the government’s plan to recriminalize the plant

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PRESS RELEASE : Justice Department Submits Proposed Regulation to Reschedule Marijuana

California Cannabis Updates1 year ago

Press Release: May 9, STIIIZY and Healing Urban Barrios hosted an Expungement Clinic & Second Chance Resource Fair

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