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Proposed Massachusetts Marijuana Reforms Represent An Important Step Forward (Op-Ed)

Published
2 months agoon

“This bill offers something we have not seen in a long time—a policy that actually reflects the realities of running a cannabis business in today’s market.”
By Payton Shubrick, Gyasi Sellers, Tito Jackson and Dennis Benzan, CommonWealth Beacon
We are a group of owner-operators of minority-owned, women-owned, social equity and economic empowerment cannabis businesses from across the Commonwealth and have deep concern about our ability to survive under the currently outdated laws and regulations.
Massachusetts once stood at the forefront of cannabis equity reform. We were the first state to create a social equity program. However, businesses like ours urgently need relief and support to survive in an incredibly challenging market.
We’ve built businesses that hire from our communities, reinvest locally and model what social equity and economic empowerment can look like, but we’re barely surviving due to oversaturation and oversupply. We need laws and regulations that enable us to thrive—not just survive—and give us a fair shot at growth and sustainability.
With the current limit of three licenses for any owner, we cannot structure models for growth or provide financial security for small owner-operated businesses. We also cannot raise capital based on the negative narrative around the market. The numbers don’t work unless you’re a vertically integrated or multi-state operator with better profit margins in neighboring states.
That’s why we support the recent redraft legislation, titled An Act Modernizing the Commonwealth’s Cannabis Laws, released by the House members of the Joint Committee on Cannabis Policy. We commend House leaders for recognizing the harsh reality that many of us operating businesses in Massachusetts are closing, and for putting forth changes that will give us breathing room and a future.
This bill offers something we have not seen in a long time—a policy that actually reflects the realities of running a cannabis business in today’s market.
One of the most important reforms it includes is the gradual increase of the retail license cap from three to six. Lacking the ability to scale, we’re permanently disadvantaged in every negotiation with landlords, investors, and suppliers. The current cap stunts our businesses before they can grow.
Without bankruptcy protections, some of our businesses will need to go into receivership, and some may even need to file for personal bankruptcy—losing homes and livelihoods. Increasing the license cap gives struggling businesses the option to sell and protect personal, family and community assets.
The bill also embraces equity joint ventures and employee ownership, paving the way for new investment dollars to come back into the local cannabis market. This gives social equity businesses a path to new sources of capital to stabilize and scale their businesses while traditional sources are still out of reach.
Critical guardrails requiring audits of business ownership and strict enforcement of the license caps are also included in the bill. These reforms ensure that changes to the licensing structures will uplift the people and communities they were meant to benefit.
The legislation also increases the adult-use possession and purchase limits from one ounce to two—which is seemingly small, but incredibly impactful. It is a necessary step that will help consumers access safe, tested products, boost legal sales and chip away at the illicit market that undercuts us.
Finally, this bill ends the mandatory vertical integration requirements in the medical cannabis program. We need to allow all small and disadvantaged businesses to participate in the medical market without requiring them to control the whole cannabis supply chain or demonstrate that they have capital resources of at least half a million dollars.
For medical patients in cities like Boston and Springfield, vertical integration requirements are a huge barrier to access to medical cannabis, which is sold tax-free. This change opens the door for those purchases for those with medical needs in communities with large populations with limited disposable income.
This legislation is not a perfect bill, but it delivers meaningful, immediate and enforceable reforms that will help small, minority-owned cannabis businesses survive today and grow tomorrow.
We didn’t enter this industry to be shut out from realizing the original intent of the first social equity and economic empowerment programs in the nation. We entered it to lead and build businesses that reflect our communities and repair decades of harm. This bill gives us a chance to do that.
Payton Shubrick is CEO of 6Bricks, a family-owned adult-use dispensary in Springfield. Gyasi Sellers is founder of Treevit, a licensed delivery operator based in Athol. Tito Jackson is CEO of Apex Noire, an adult-use dispensary in Boston. Dennis Benzan is co-owner of Western Front, which operates three adult-use dispensaries across Chelsea and Cambridge.
This article first appeared on CommonWealth Beacon and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Texans Deserve Choice, Not a Monopoly: Texas Hemp Business Council Urges Lawmakers to Defeat SB 5

Published
18 minutes agoon
July 29, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – AUSTIN, Texas, July 28, 2025 – The Texas Hemp Business Council (THBC) issued the following statement:
“As S.B. 5 heads to the Senate floor during the special session of the 89th Texas Legislature, Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick and Senators Charles Perry and Roland Gutierrez are actively looking to gift-wrap the entire cannabis market to a few select state-licensed [medical] marijuana companies, one of which already controls over 75% of the market.
“Their claim that the restrictive Texas Compassionate Use Program (TCUP) can replace hemp-derived cannabinoids is misleading and dangerous.
“TCUP currently serves just over 100,000 patients and requires registration, physician prescriptions, higher prices and fewer options. While H.B. 46 was an attempt to improve the program, it does little to expand real access to a restrictive and expensive TCUP program that serves an entirely different purpose than hemp.
“Meanwhile, hemp is legal and regulated under federal and state law and serves millions of adult consumers and veterans who rely on affordable, accessible alternatives for wellness, pain relief and more.
“S.B. 5 would destroy a $10 billion industry that supports over 53,000 jobs and eliminate economic opportunity for thousands of small business owners across the state. All being done under the false flag of ‘safety,’ while the real goal is market control by a politically connected few. This isn’t about protecting public health; it’s about protecting a monopoly.
“Governor Abbott’s veto message was clear: Regulate hemp responsibly; don’t ban it. Texans deserve choice, not coercion. S.B. 5 is prohibition disguised as policy, and lawmakers should reject it. Public opinion, economic data and common sense all point in the same direction: This is a manufactured crisis driven by special interests, not public demand.
“At a time when Texas faces real and pressing challenges like strengthening flood warning systems, redistricting and providing meaningful property tax relief, some Senate leaders are spending this special session pushing a hemp ban Texans clearly don’t want. It’s a clear example of misplaced priorities and misguided policies.
“That’s why THBC and the vast majority of Texans strongly support a common-sense alternative that includes 21-plus age limits, child-resistant packaging and setbacks from schools. It’s the right path forward for public safety, economic freedom and the future of hemp in Texas.”

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
featured
Massachusetts Psychiatric Society Endorses Bill To Decriminalize Psilocybin Possession

Published
1 hour agoon
July 29, 2025
“We are encouraged by the growing body of rigorous research exploring the use of psychedelics, including psilocybin in treating treatment-resistant types of mental illness.”
By Jack Gorsline, HorizonMass
Massachusetts psychedelic policy advocates recently marked a significant milestone at a July 15 legislative hearing, which featured testimony on four of the 12 psychedelics-related bills filed this year on Beacon Hill. The hearing was highlighted by a historic, first-ever endorsement of psychedelic decriminalization-specific legislation anywhere by a professional psychiatric society: The Massachusetts Psychiatric Society (MPS).
Among the bills addressed at the hearing of the Joint Committee on the Judiciary was H.1726, sponsored by state Rep. Homar Gómez (D), which seeks to decriminalize the possession of psilocybin.
Another proposal, H.1624 from state Rep. Mike Connolly (D), proposes a psychedelics task force to consider equity in psychedelic access.
H.1858, from state Rep. Marc Lombardo (R), aims to reduce legal penalties for psilocybin possession by imposing a $100 fine for quantities under one gram, effectively decriminalizing small amounts.
And S.1113, sponsored by state Sen. Cindy Friedman (D), directs the Department of Public Health (DPH) to create a trial program for medically supervised psilocybin therapy, specifically excluding ownership by “cannabis industry organizations, psychedelic molecule development companies or pharmaceutical companies.”
Massachusetts Psychiatric Society supports psychedelics measures
The endorsement from the Massachusetts Psychiatric Society, a professional organization representing approximately 1,400 psychiatrists across the state, was a notable development.
Dr. Jhilam Biswas, speaking on behalf of the MPS, stated, “I’m here today to express the society’s support for H.1624, H.1726, H.1858 and S.1113, bills that allow for the dismissal of complaints for the simple possession of psilocybin, provided that if the individual meets clear safety-based criteria, which is being over the age of 21, not operating a vehicle and not endangering of children.”
Dr. Biswas clarified that the society’s support was not a “blanket endorsement of recreational psychedelic use,” noting its opposition to last November’s Ballot Question 4, which members believed was “too far reaching and lacked necessary safeguards.” She emphasized, “While we know there is promising research happening in psychedelic medicines in the field of psychiatry and medicine, broad and premature access to many different substances without caution is not only dangerous, but does impact the research community.”
In contrast, Dr. Biswas described the current bills as a “more balanced and responsible approach,” applying “narrowly to define situations to adults over 21 who are not driving and not endangering children, and whose action caused no harm to others.” She added, “It gives courts more discretion and it maintains important public safety protections while avoiding any unnecessary criminal penalties.”
The MPS also acknowledged the amount of research into psychedelics for mental illness treatment.
“Moreover, we are encouraged by the growing body of rigorous research exploring the use of psychedelics, including psilocybin in treating treatment-resistant types of mental illness,” Dr. Biswas said. “Institutions like our local EMC hospitals and research centers in Massachusetts are leading these studies with promising early outcomes.” She concluded by urging legislators to view these bills “not just at, this as criminal justice reform, but as a public health opportunity.”
According to the organization Mass Healing, the MPS’s endorsement of these three psilocybin decriminalization proposals marks the first time any branch of the American Psychiatric Association (APA) has endorsed psychedelics legislation of any kind.
Curiously, the MPS’s recent endorsement contrasts with testimony provided at a previous psychedelics bill hearing last month. Outgoing MPS President Dr. Nassir Ghaemi opposed H.2506, which sought to decriminalize possession of up to 50 grams of dried psilocybin mushrooms, stating he was speaking “on his own behalf, as well as that of the society.”
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Former Yes on 4 campaign staffer Graham Moore also spoke in favor of the bills, acknowledging that the previous measure “went too far for the people of Massachusetts right now.” The advocate championed the current proposals as “much more narrowly tailored,” and emphasized that “people don’t want lives ruined over simple possession, but people also do not want unlimited green light to everybody’s all sorts of psychedelics.”
Moore also refuted claims of increased public health problems in areas that have decriminalized psilocybin, citing Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Colorado as well as the Netherlands, where legal psilocybin availability has not led to widespread abuse due to its non-addictive nature.
Timothy Morris is a Billerica resident who, along with fellow advocate and Mass resident Henry Morgan, submitted H.1726 to state Rep. Gómez. At the hearing, he expressed his gratitude for the process: “I’m thankful that we’re able to get the ball rolling so soon after question 4, as well as for Dr. Biswas’s supporting testimony.”
Morris added, “The fact that Institutions—such as the Massachusetts Psychiatric Society—are beginning to support the decriminalization movement, marks the start of a powerful paradigm shift for related public policy.”
This article is syndicated by the MassWire news service of the Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism. If you want to see more reporting like this, make a contribution at givetobinj.org.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Politics makes strange bedfellows and add in cannabis and you got some interesting news
In a dramatic turn this week, a GOP Senator rides to the rescue of hemp. While as a party they haven’t lined up support cannabis and hemp, GOP Senator Rand Paul (R‑KY) successfully blocked a proposed federal ban on hemp-derived THC products had been inserted into a critical spending bill on agriculture and related funding. The provision sought to redefine hemp by capping total THC—including delta‑8, delta‑10, and THCA—rather than just delta‑9 THC, effectively outlawing most edible hemp products
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Paul argued the language would “destroy hemp farmers in my state” and devastate an emerging national industry, threatening thousands of jobs and billions in revenue. Kentucky, once a leading tobacco-growing state, has become a national leader in hemp production—generating tens of millions annually in cultivation, processing, and manufacturing jobs. His intervention represents a major victory for hemp advocates.

The hemp-derived THC market in the U.S.—centered on delta‑8, delta‑10, and similar compounds—jumped nearly 1,283% from 2020 to 2023, rising from $200.5 million to approximately $2.8 billion. Meanwhile, the broader U.S. legal cannabis (marijuana) industry reached roughly $38.5 billion in 2024, expected to climb to over $44 billion in 2025.
Globally, the industrial hemp market—including fiber, seeds, food and wellness applications—is estimated at $6.6 billion in 2024, and projected to hit $25–26 billion by 2034. North America is a hub for both cannabis and hemp, with legal cannabis valued at $26.6 billion in 2024 and forecast to grow over 10‑fold to $285 billion by 2034.
Industry stakeholders emphasize hemp’s unique position: it’s federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill, so long as delta‑9 THC remains under 0.3%. Federal safety net distinguishes hemp‑THC products from marijuana, which remains federally illicit despite many states permitting recreational or medical use. Hemp has become increasingly popular, in Texas, Bayou City Hemp Company, the parent of Bayou Beverage, has taken hemp‑derived THC drinks mainstream.
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Senator Paul’s move reflects the intersection of politics, agriculture, and emerging consumer markets. As lawmakers weigh the future of hemp‑THC regulation, the broader cannabis industry—and its relationship with alcohol and public policy—continues its rapid evolution.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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