“For a private model to work, these are the things that are critical,” he said. “Until we’re given any kind of direction about a path, I don’t see why we should do all the work.”
featured
Pennsylvania House Democrats Ask Voters To Pressure Senators To Pass A Marijuana Legalization Bill

Published
2 days agoon

House Democrats in Pennsylvania are calling on voters to pressure state senators to sign off on a House-passed bill that would legalize marijuana and sell the drug through state-owned stores, saying the reform would benefit health and safety and bring in billions of dollars in revenue for the commonwealth.
After the bill—HB 1200, from Rep. Rick Krajewski (D)—narrowly passed the House of Representatives in May, it proceeded to the Senate, where the Law and Justice Committee promptly shot it down.
While other legalization proposals have since been filed in the state—including from bipartisan lawmakers in both chambers—Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R) and others have already signaled disinterest in the reform.
In the new call to action on HB 1200, the Pennsylvania House Democratic Caucus notes that lawmakers in the chamber “passed this modern, innovative adult-use cannabis bill that puts public health first, generates billions of dollars in revenue, creates jobs, and improves community safety.”
“Tell your senators that it’s time to legalize adult-use cannabis,” the caucus said on social media, providing a link to a prewritten letter to Pittman and a number of other Senate leaders.
The PA House passed a modern adult-use cannabis bill that puts public health first, but the PA Senate Law & Justice Committee rejected this bill.
Tell your senators that it’s time to legalize adult-use cannabis: https://t.co/G0eTwfwfs2 pic.twitter.com/Z8QuGsxB6T
— PA House Democrats (@PaHouseDems) July 21, 2025
“I’m an adult and want to be treated like one. I also want the commonwealth to stop losing out on billions of dollars in revenue,” the template letter says. “Virtually every state surrounding Pennsylvania has legal adult-use cannabis, and it’s time for us to pass a law giving adults the power to choose.”
Polls have shown bipartisan support for legalization among voters, but the reform has consistently stalled in the legislature, due largely 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.
Those who don’t want to use the Senate Democrats’ prewritten form can also contact their senators directly.
In addition to pushback from Senate Majority Leader Pittman, another Republican, Sen. Scott Martin, who chairs the influential Appropriations Committee, told Lancaster Online earlier this month that he didn’t plan to move on any adult-use legalization bills.
Nevertheless, one Republican senator sponsoring a legalization proposal said last week that supporters in the legislature are “picking up votes.”
Sen. Dan Laughlin (R)—who has introduced a legalization bipartisan bill with Sen. Sharif Street (D)—said support is growing because “people would rather [legalize cannabis] than do a tax increase to try and balance a budget.”
Rep. Amen Brown (D) subsequently said he intended to file a House companion version of that measure, circulating a cosponsorship memo to colleagues earlier this month.
Separately, just days after Laughlin and Street filed their measure, Reps. Emily Kinkead (D) and Abby Major (R)—alongside eight other cosponsors—filed legislation in the House to enact the reform. The pair have previously championed other proposals to end prohibition.
Laughlin and 16 other lawmakers also recently filed a separate 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.
Laughlin previewed the 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.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Pittman indicated in June that marijuana legalization would not be included in the 2026 budget as lawmakers approached the deadline he expected they would miss.
Ahead of the deadline, Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) held out hope that negotiators can “get it done.”
“We’ve had really good, honest dialogue about it,” said the governor, who had criticized the Senate for abruptly derailing the House marijuana legalization bill.
“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.”
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.
Following the Senate committee vote that scuttled HB 1200, lawmakers from both chambers who support legalization have been trading criticisms about each other’s roles in the stalled push to end prohibition.
Bill sponsor 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.
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.
In recent comments to that matter, Krajewski told local news outlet Spotlight PA that for him to support a private model, he’d need a bill to include protections for small businesses to ensure large companies don’t dominate the market.
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.
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.
Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
You may like
-
Vaporized Cannabis Mitigates Migraine Symptoms
-
Total Massachusetts Adult-Use Cannabis Sales Have Surpassed $8 Billion
-
Oklahoma Marijuana Activists Plan Push To Put Legalization On Ballot Despite New Petioinining Restrictions
-
Trulieve Expands Distribution of Onward, Launches THC-Infused Energy Drink Upward
-
State: marijuana dispensaries surpass $8B in gross adult-use sales
-
Trump’s VA Secretary Wants To ‘See People Healed’ With Psychedelics, But They’re ‘Tied Up With Regulation’


The inhalation of cannabis flower containing THC and CBD provides superior migraine relief compared to a placebo, according to clinical trial data presented at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
“This is the first placebo-controlled study in this space. It’s the first real — to me — compelling evidence for the anti-migraine effects of cannabis in humans,” the study’s lead researcher said.
Investigators affiliated with the University of California at San Diego presented the findings. They had previously documented their results in a 2024 preprint paper, concluding, “Vaporized 6% THC+11% CBD cannabis flower was superior to placebo for [migraine] pain relief, pain freedom, and MBS [most bothersome symptom] freedom at 2 hours as well as 24-hour sustained pain freedom and sustained MBS freedom and 48-hour sustained MBS freedom.”
THC/CBD cannabis was also superior to placebo at relieving migraine-related photophobia (light sensitivity) and phonophobia (sound sensitivity).
No serious adverse events were reported.
“Nearly one-third of migraine sufferers have tried cannabis for symptom management, and patients consistently report that it significantly reduces their pain severity and migraine frequency,” NORML’s Deputy Director Paul Armentano said. “These data further affirm patients’ testimonials.”
Survey data indicates that migraine sufferers frequently consume cannabis preparations to mitigate their symptoms and reduce their use of prescription drugs. A 2002 literature review of nine studies involving 5,600 subjects concluded: “Medical marijuana has a significant clinical response by reducing the length and frequency of migraines. … Due to its effectiveness and convenience, medical marijuana therapy may be helpful for patients suffering from migraines.”
Additional information on the use of cannabis for migraines is available from NORML’s publication Clinical Applications for Cannabis and Cannabinoids.
Related

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
featured
Total Massachusetts Adult-Use Cannabis Sales Have Surpassed $8 Billion

Published
2 hours agoon
July 23, 2025
The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) announced Tuesday that the state has surpassed $8 billion in total adult-use sales since the market’s launch.
“The Commission is glad to see the Commonwealth achieve another adult-use cannabis sales milestone, which demonstrates that consumers continue to have confidence in the safety and security of the regulated market.” — CCC Executive Director Travis Ahern, in a press release
Cannabis retailers officially passed the $8 billion mark on June 28, 2025, following a record-breaking start to the year, according to the regulators’ Open Data platform. The development includes record monthly sales this year in January, April, and May, putting Massachusetts on track to beat last year’s annual sales record of $1.64 billion.

“As we anticipate the arrival of Social Consumption businesses – an entirely new license category – in the coming months, we look forward to increasing economic growth for Massachusetts,” Ahern said.
Flower has remained the most popular cannabis product sold by licensed retailers in 2025, responsible for more than $338 million in sales, while vape products ($168.8 million) and cannabis pre-rolls ($116.4 million) are the closest runner-ups.
Meanwhile, the three biggest sales days in Massachusetts (July 2 and April 17-18) either preceded a major holiday or 4/20, which is typically the busiest time of year for cannabis dispensaries.
Based in Portland, Oregon, Graham is Ganjapreneur’s Chief Editor. He has been writing about the legalization landscape since 2012 and has been contributing to Ganjapreneur since our official launch in…
More by Graham Abbott

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
featured
Oklahoma Marijuana Activists Plan Push To Put Legalization On Ballot Despite New Petioinining Restrictions

Published
3 hours agoon
July 23, 2025
“We are proceeding forward and following the guidance provided by the secretary of state at the front end. This is basically extra administrative work for us.”
By Barbara Hoberock, Oklahoma Voice
Recreational marijuana supporters are moving forward with an effort to get it on the Oklahoma ballot, despite uncertainty about the constitutionality of a new law that slaps more regulations on the process.
Supporters of State Question 837 received permission to begin collecting signatures for a constitutional amendment that would legalize the use of recreational marijuana.
Supporters can begin collecting signatures August 6. The deadline to turn in the 172,993 signatures is November 3.
Lawmakers passed and Gov. Kevin Stitt (R) in May signed into law Senate Bill 1027 that puts more restrictions on the process voters use to get issues on the ballot.
It quickly drew two legal challenges in the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
The state’s high court has not blocked the law from taking effect because it wrote that it is considering a challenge to a State Question 836 to open the state’s primaries. The court order does not explain the reasoning.
Among other things, the new petition law puts caps on the number of signatures that can be collected by county, which supporters say forces greater participation outside the highest populated counties.
Jed Green is director of Oklahomans for Responsible Cannabis Action, a marijuana policy advocacy group backing legalization.
“We are proceeding forward and following the guidance provided by the secretary of state at the front end,” Green said. “This is basically extra administrative work for us. The more egregious unconstitutional aspects of 1027 may be litigated at some point in the future.”
The geographical requirements of the new law mean the organization has to collect signatures in 20 counties, which he is confident can be successfully done because his organization is statewide, he said.
“I think it is nearly impossible for anyone to be successful under the new rules,” said Amber England, who has worked on several ballot initiatives, including the successful effort to expand Medicaid and a current effort to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. The latter issue will be on the ballot in June 2026. While the state may have an initiative petition process on the books, because of the restrictions lawmakers have implemented, it effectively has been shut down, she said.
“I have worked on various different initiative petitions over the last decade,” she said. “The process has gotten harder every single time because of the different restrictions the Legislature has put on the process in an effort to take power away from voters.”
After lawmakers refused to act, voters used the process to expand Medicaid, pass criminal justice reform and legalize medical marijuana.
But voters have balked at legalizing recreational marijuana.
In 2018, 57 percent of voters approved legalizing medical marijuana.
But less than five years later, they defeated a proposed state statute change that would have legalized recreational marijuana. The vote was nearly 62 percent against State Question 820.
Pat McFerron, who ran the campaign against the recreational marijuana legalization, said it failed in all 77 counties.
“I think most Oklahomans believe the current system we have is de facto recreational,” he said. “The barrier is so miniscule so I see no desire among the public to make it even easier to buy cannabis.”

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

Vaporized Cannabis Mitigates Migraine Symptoms

Total Massachusetts Adult-Use Cannabis Sales Have Surpassed $8 Billion

Oklahoma Marijuana Activists Plan Push To Put Legalization On Ballot Despite New Petioinining Restrictions

Trulieve Expands Distribution of Onward, Launches THC-Infused Energy Drink Upward

State: marijuana dispensaries surpass $8B in gross adult-use sales

Trump’s VA Secretary Wants To ‘See People Healed’ With Psychedelics, But They’re ‘Tied Up With Regulation’

Missouri Supreme Court rules marijuana taxes can’t be stacked

Trump’s DEA pick confirmed as cannabis rescheduling awaits (Newsletter: July 23, 2025)

Chuck Nice dishes about comedy show at New Jersey cannabis store

MINNESOTA WANTS YOU! (To Name Its New Official THC Gummy)

Ont. man charged in child cannabis poisoning case

Missouri Official Says New Marijuana Testing Protocol Shouldn’t Disrupt Businesses

Texas Constitution May Bar Lawmakers From Hemp THC Ban in Special Session

15 Entrepreneurs Building The Future Of Mushrooms Around The World

South Dakota Farmers See Hemp As A Way To Bring Jobs To Small Towns And Absorb Carbon

Cannabis Industry Stakeholders React to DEA Head Terrance Cole’s Confirmation

THE WISDOM OF OZ (1999)

New North Dakota Medical Cannabis Reforms Set to Take Effect Aug. 1

Missouri Supreme Court’s Marijuana Ruling Says Cities And Counties Cannot Stack Local Taxes

Khalifa Kush Launches in Ohio Through Exclusive Partnership

Suspected illegal marijuana grow location in Calaveras County busted

Ozzy Osbourne, Prince Of Darkness And Counterculture Legend, Dies At 76

DEA Veteran Confirmed to Lead Agency

Flowhub Launches POS-Native Ecommerce Solution to Power Online Cannabis Retail Growth

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

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!

5 best CBD creams of 2024 by Leafly

EU initiative begins bid to open access to psychedelic therapies

Free delta-9 gummies from Bay Smokes

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

May 2024 Leafly HighLight: Pink Runtz strain

5 best autoflower seed banks of 2024 by Leafly

Mississippi city official pleads guilty to selling fake CBD products

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

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

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

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

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

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”

5 best THC drinks of 2024 by Leafly

The Daily Hit: October 2, 2024

6 best CBD gummies of 2024 by Leafly

5 best delta-9 THC gummies of 2024 by Leafly

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

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

PRESS RELEASE : Justice Department Submits Proposed Regulation to Reschedule Marijuana

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

Press Release: May 9, STIIIZY and Healing Urban Barrios hosted an Expungement Clinic & Second Chance Resource Fair
Trending
-
California Cannabis Updates1 year ago
Alert: Department of Cannabis Control updates data dashboards with full data for 2023
-
Breaking News1 year ago
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!
-
best list12 months ago
5 best CBD creams of 2024 by Leafly
-
Business10 months ago
EU initiative begins bid to open access to psychedelic therapies
-
Bay Smokes1 year ago
Free delta-9 gummies from Bay Smokes
-
cbd1 year ago
New Study Analyzes the Effects of THCV, CBD on Weight Loss
-
California1 year ago
May 2024 Leafly HighLight: Pink Runtz strain
-
autoflower seeds10 months ago
5 best autoflower seed banks of 2024 by Leafly