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Michigan Cannabis Sales Fall, But Consumers Are Buying More at Dispensaries

Published
11 hours agoon

Adult-use cannabis sales totals in Michigan declined for a fourth consecutive month in May, according to state Cannabis Regulatory Agency (CRA) data outlined by the Detroit Metro Times. Between January and May, adult-use dispensaries in the state sold $1.31 billion worth of products, down from $1.34 billion from the same period last year.
It marks the Michigan cannabis industry’s first year-over-year decline since adult-use sales began in the state in December 2019.
The downturn is likely caused by oversupply – state data shows that dispensaries held more than 160,000 pounds of flower in April, up from 143,300 pounds the prior year – which is leading to lower prices for consumers. In May, the average price of an ounce of flower was $63, compared to $88 a year prior. When adult-use sales began in 2019, the average price for an ounce of flower was more than $500.
In turn, consumers are buying more product at dispensaries. In May, retailers sold about 20% more flower, concentrates, vape cartridges, kief, edibles, and shake, despite reporting lower sales totals.
In April, state lawmakers held a hearing about whether to impose a moratorium on new cannabis cultivators, during which Brian Hanna, director of the CRA, told the panel that without changes, the industry is “going to see consolidation.”
“You’re going to see small businesses going out of business. You’re going to see bigger buying out smaller,” she said, according to a Metro Times report. “You’re going to see lesser variety. You’re going to see social equity businesses suffer along with those businesses.”
However, under current state law, the CRA is required to issue licenses to applicants that meet the criteria, and lawmakers have not passed any moratorium.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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New Michigan Bill Would Legalize Psilocybin For People With PTSD

Published
26 minutes agoon
June 26, 2025
Michigan Democratic lawmakers havw introduced legislation that would exempt adults with PTSD from state laws against the possession, cultivation and use of psilocybin and psilocin, the two primary active components of psychedelic mushrooms.
If approved, HB 4686, from Rep. Mike McFall and six cosponsors, would effectively legalize the personal use and cultivation of the psychedelic substances by people with the diagnosis. The two-page bill would not create a regulated psychedelics system or change the legal status of the drugs more broadly.
McFall held a press conference on Wednesday about the measure, saying it “will help protect those suffering from PTSD so they can use their medicine without fear of the unnecessary legal risks that veterans seeking this treatment currently must navigate.”
“Our understanding of medicine is constantly evolving, and there has been a shift in treating PTSD with psychedelics over the last decade,” he said. “Preliminary research is promising that psilocybin has potentially life-changing effects for extended periods of time after treatment.”
Appearing with McFall was Michael G. Smith Jr., a retired U.S. Army sergeant who said he’d “had more success in the mitigation of my PTSD symptoms with microdosing psilocybin than all the talk therapy offered by the VA Healthcare System,” adding that he’d tried “all their therapies available” at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
“As a veteran with PTSD, I am encouraged by the legislative efforts to decriminalize psilocybin since it has been clinically proven to mitigate and eliminate the symptomatology related to PTSD,” Smith said. “This is important considering the vast field of studies over 25 years that identify that PTSD can lead to coronary vascular diseases, atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter, which means there is an awesome opportunity to prevent veterans from developing life threatening heart conditions with the treatment of psilocyn.”
A press release from McFall notes that VA “has started research on veterans and treating their PTSD with psychedelics, including psilocybin,” and, citing the advocacy group Heroic Hearts Project, says that 80 percent of veterans experienced improvements in PTSD symptoms after a single psilocybin session.
The bill was officially introduced on Wednesday and has been referred to the House Committee on Families and Veterans.
Last year, Michigan lawmakers sent a letter to Congress, the U.S. Department of Defense and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) urging them to prioritize research and investment in psychedelics and other “non-technology treatment options” to address psychological trauma from military service.
Several cities in Michigan have enacted local psychedelics decriminalization policies.
Separately in Michigan, a second Bigfoot and marijuana news story recently broke in the state during the span of a single month.
Previously, an alleged Bigfoot sighting in Monroe County last month sparked some creativity within the marijuana community when, earlier this month, the dispensary Uniq Cannabis started offering a free pre-roll to anyone who brought in photographic proof of the mythological creature.
More recently, a Sasquatch statue outside the separate retailer Higher Love, located in Menominee, is at the center of controversy. The exhibit became a talking point at the city planning commission’s meeting this month, where certain community members argued that the faux beast could attract the attention of youth—with one resident advising the panel to “think about what mascots they see in our community and how they are impacting children.”
Meanwhile, state officials earlier this year announced that the disbursement of nearly $100 million in marijuana tax revenue to over 300 cities and tribes across the state thanks to the state’s adult-use legalization law. That’s part of the overall $331 million in tax dollars Michigan is distributing across various initiatives.
The tax dollars will support various local infrastructure, education and other needed services, the state Treasury Department said.
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia/Mushroom Observer.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Oregon Campaign To Legalize Cannabis Social Lounges Prepares To Submit First Signatures On Way To 2026 Ballot

Published
1 hour agoon
June 26, 2025
A campaign in Oregon to allow marijuana social lounges has cleared an early checkpoint on its path to the 2026 state ballot, with organizers recently announcing that they’ve collected enough voter signatures to advance the measure to the next stage of the process.
The Oregon Cannabis Cafe Coalition (OCCC)—a Portland-based group that advocates for the legalization of smoking lounges and cafes where consumption of infused edibles is permitted—says its now collected more than 1,400 signatures, which will be submitted to state elections officials.
Organizers need to submit at least 1,000 validated voter signatures in order for state officials to prepare a ballot title and summary for the proposal. At that point, the campaign could move on to the main signature gathering effort: collecting roughly 120,000 voter signatures to qualify the initiative for the November 2026 general election ballot.
“As of right now, I have taken copies of all the signatures, and we are about to turn them into Salem where they will verify if the signatures are valid and meet the minimum requirement of signatures obtained,” Justyce Seith, OCCC’s founder and the chief petitioner for the Oregon Cannabis Social Lounge Act, told Marijuana Moment this week.
“If signatures are approved,” she added, “they will start drafting the title for this initiative and we will begin our journey to collect the required amount of signatures for the next round!”
The campaign’s immediate goal, Seith continued, is to raise funds to help pay for professional petitioners, billboard advertisements, web design and community events.
She’s also reaching out to companies and individuals who might be able to volunteer, host campaign events or help amplify organizers’ efforts.
“I need help now more than ever,” she said, encouraging supporters to visit the campaign’s website and Instagram page or email organizers directly. “If anyone is willing to contribute monetary funds, or even time and resources, that would be fantastic! I really am just one woman trying to make a difference.”
Seith initially filed the initiative petition in April, a little more than a month after submitting a separate, similar proposal that would legalize cannabis cafes. She clarified on Wednesday that the current initiative, referring to the facilities as “social lounges,” is the measure the campaign will attempt to put before voters.
If passed, it would legalize and regulate state-licensed cannabis consumption lounges, offering what the initiative describes as “a safe, legal environment for adults to consume cannabis” in compliance with state law.
“These lounges will operate in a manner that ensures public health and safety, while providing adult-use cannabis consumers with a designated space to enjoy cannabis in social settings, and allowing the sale and consumption of unmedicated food and beverages,” the petition’s purpose section says.
It specifies that cannabis social lounge licenses would be available only to small cannabis business licensees, known in the state as microbusinesses.
Under the proposal, cannabis social lounges could allow adults 21 and older to consume cannabis and sell “unmedicated food and beverages,” but they could not “sell, distribute, or provide cannabis for sale on the premises” of the business.
Consumption of marijuana “must be limited to smoking, vaping, and the consumption of non-edible products,” the proposal says.
Alcohol and tobacco—including nicotine vape products—would be strictly prohibited at the businesses. They would also need to close by 2 a.m.
It’s unclear whether local governments could prohibit the establishments. The petition says they could “regulate the number of cannabis social lounges” and set further restrictions, but it doesn’t address outright bans. Local governments would also be able to inspect the lounges to ensure compliance with state and local law.
Regulators at the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission (OLCC) would oversee the new businesses. The petition outlines a license application process for lounges as well as basic penalties, noting, for example, that violations of any provisions in the act may result in fines and/or license suspension or revocation. It also says unlicensed operation of a lounge could carry civil and criminal penalties.
As for public education, lounges would be required to post “signs or other visual aids…to inform patrons about the risks of cannabis consumption and the lounge’s operating rules,” the proposal says.
OLCC would also work with public health authorities ” to provide educational materials and outreach programs to ensure that Oregon residents understand the purpose and rules governing cannabis consumption lounges.”
The new measure would appear on Oregon’s November 2026 ballot. If approved, it would take effect January 1, 2027.
Separately in Oregon, state officials earlier this month notified a federal appeals court that they are challenging a lower judge’s ruling striking down a voter-approved law that required licensed marijuana businesses to enter into labor peace agreements with workers and mandated that employers remain neutral in discussions around unionization.
Details of the appeal are still unknown, but the court gave the state a deadline of September 3 to provide an opening brief, and the plaintiffs must file a reply brief by October 3.
Under the currently paused law, a marijuana businesses that was unable to provide proof of a labor peace agreement could have been subject a denial or revocation of their license.
Meanwhile, an ongoing federal lawsuit in Oregon could eventually give more people legal access to psilocybin, with plaintiffs arguing that the state’s first-in-the nation psilocybin law wrongfully prevents homebound patients from seeking care.
In an 12-page ruling issued late last month, District Judge Mustafa T. Kasubhai denied the state’s motion to dismiss the suit, opining that the plaintiffs have standing to bring the challenge and that a modification of the state’s psilocybin law to provide a reasonable accommodation to homebound patients under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) would not violate principles of federalism.
“The Court agrees with Plaintiffs and finds that their requested remedy rests on physical access rather than use or distribution of a controlled substance in violation of state and federal laws,” the ruling said.
Also last month, the state’s governor signed a bill into law that will allow marijuana businesses to offer samples of their products at trade events, while removing restrictions on wholesale transactions between cannabis companies at those gatherings.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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GOP Congressman Behind Hemp THC Ban Says He’s Not Worried About Potential Senate Opposition To The Proposal

Published
2 hours agoon
June 26, 2025
A GOP congressman pushing for a federal hemp THC ban in a spending bill that’s advancing in the House says he’s not concerned about any potential opposition in the Senate—and he’s also disputing reports about the scope of what his legislation would do to the industry.
Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) told Marijuana Moment on Wednesday that “the bottom line is that you have some bad actors who are taking advantage of a loophole in the Farm Bill to sell psychoactive substances,” which was “not the intention.”
The congressman was referencing a large-scale agriculture bill that President Donald Trump signed into law during his first term that federally legalized hemp and its derivatives.
The 2026 spending legislation that contains provisions to ban consumable hemp products with any quantifiable amount of THC advanced out of the House Appropriations Committee on Monday and is now headed to the floor before potentially getting taken up by the Senate.
Asked whether he worried about pushback on the hemp language in the opposite chamber, Harris said, “I don’t think so.”
“I think we very carefully drafted it,” he said, adding that, “I think there was some misunderstanding about the wording that some people said, somehow, any measurable amount [of THC] would result in it not being able to be sold. That’s not what the legislation said.”
But while a report attached to the legislation was amended to make that clarification, signaling that Congress doesn’t mean to prohibit non-intoxicating consumable cannabinoids like CBD, the text of the bill itself hasn’t been changed.
The relevant section would redefine the crop under federal statute in a way that would still prohibit cannabis products containing any “quantifiable” amount of THC or “any other cannabinoids that have similar effects (or are marketed to have similar effects) on humans or animals” as THC.
Harris—who serves as chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies—also noted in the interview with Marijuana Moment that there “was no opposition [to the hemp provisions] that came up in committee, that’s for sure.”
He also briefly weighed in on the Texas governor’s recent veto of a bill to recriminalize hemp products with any THC—simply stating that he’s “not paying attention to what a single state is doing” while he focuses on enacting the proposed federal ban.
The language in the congressional bill, meanwhile, would still effectively eliminate the most commonly marketed hemp products within the industry, as even non-intoxicating CBD items that are sold across the country typically contain trace amounts of THC. Under current law, those products are allowed if they contain no more than 0.3 percent THC by dry weight.
The proposed policy championed by Harris would drastically change that. It would instead maintain the legal status of “industrial hemp” under a revised definition that allows for the cultivation and sale of hemp grown for fiber, whole grain, oil, cake, nut, hull, microgreens or “other edible hemp leaf products intended for human consumption.”
The Congressional Research Service (CRS) released a report last week stating that the legislation would “effectively” prohibit hemp-derived cannabinoid products. Initially it said that such a ban would prevent the sale of CBD as well, but the CRS report was updated to exclude that language for reasons that are unclear.
The hemp language is largely consistent with appropriations and agriculture legislation that was introduced, but not ultimately enacted, under the last Congress.
Hemp industry stakeholders rallied against that proposal, an earlier version of which was also included in the base bill from the subcommittee last year. It’s virtually identical to a provision of the 2024 Farm Bill that was attached by a separate committee last May via an amendment from Rep. Mary Miller (R-IL), which was also not enacted into law.
There are some differences between the prior spending bill and this latest version for 2026, including a redefining of what constitutes a “quantifiable” amount of THC that’d be prohibited for hemp products.
It now says that a quantifiable amount is “based on substance, form, manufacture, or article (as determined by the Secretary of Health and Human Services in consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture),” whereas it was previously defined as an amount simply “determined by the Secretary in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services.”
The proposed legislation also now specifies that the term hemp does not include “a drug that is the subject of an application approved under subsection (c) or (j) of section 505 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 355),” which seems to carve out an exception for Food and Drug Administration- (FDA) approved drugs such Epidiolex, which is synthesized from CBD.
A leading alcohol industry association, meanwhile, has called on Congress to dial back language in the House spending bill that would ban most consumable hemp products, instead proposing to maintain the legalization of naturally derived cannabinoids from the crop and only prohibit synthetic items.
Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America (WSWA) President and CEO Francis Creighton said in a press release that “proponents and opponents alike have agreed that this language amounts to a ban.”
“By pushing a rapidly evolving industry back into the shadows, Congress is creating even more chaos in the marketplace, undermining state initiatives and punishing responsible actors,” he said. “We urge the full House to reconsider this approach. States can regulate intoxicating products safely and effectively through systems that preserve consumer trust and public safety. It’s time for Congress to follow their lead, not override their authority.”
Members of WSWA also met with lawmakers and staffers in April to advocate for three key policy priorities that the group says is based on “sound principles of alcohol distribution.” They include banning synthetic THC, setting up a federal system for testing and labeling products and establishing state-level power to regulate retail sales.
Separately, key GOP congressional lawmakers—including one member who supports marijuana legalization—don’t seem especially concerned about provisions in the bill despite concern from stakeholders that it would put much of the hemp industry in jeopardy by banning most consumable products derived from the plant.
—
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Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.
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Jonathan Miller, general counsel of the U.S. Hemp Roundtable, told congressional lawmakers in April that the market is “begging” for federal regulations around cannabis products.
At the hearing, Rep. James Comer (R-KY) also inquired about FDA inaction around regulations, sarcastically asking if it’d require “a gazillion bureaucrats that work from home” to regulate cannabinoids such as CBD.
A report from Bloomberg Intelligence (BI) last year called cannabis a “significant threat” to the alcohol industry, citing survey data that suggests more people are using cannabis as a substitute for alcoholic beverages such a beer and wine.
Last November, meanwhile, a beer industry trade group put out a statement of guiding principles to address what it called “the proliferation of largely unregulated intoxicating hemp and cannabis products,” warning of risks to consumers and communities resulting from THC consumption.
The LCB contributed reporting from Washington, D.C.

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

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