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Texas Voters Want Synthetic THC Outlawed, Poll Shared By Proponents Of Reining In Hemp Industry Finds

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Proponents of reining in the largely unregulated intoxicating hemp industry in Texas shared new polling data on Wednesday indicating that majorities of respondents from both major political parties support outlawing synthetic cannabinoids, such as delta-8 THC, and would rather obtain therapeutic cannabis products through a state-licensed medical marijuana program than from a “smoke shop selling unregulated and untested hemp.”

The new survey comes as lawmakers, who convened for a special legislative session this week, reconsider banning all hemp products containing even trace amounts of THC and most other cannabinoids following a veto of similar legislation by Gov. Greg Abbott (R) last month.

Conducted in June by the group Baselice and Associates, the newly shared survey found that 68 percent of Texas voters overall support a ban on synthetic or lab-produced THC products, including 78 percent of Republicans, 56 percent of Democrats and 66 percent of independents.

Respondents were asked, “California, Arkansas and Colorado have outlawed synthetic or lab-produced THC”—with some respondents also told that Congress is considering a ban—”Should Texas outlaw synthetic THC?”

A second question posed a hypothetical: “If you wanted to take something with THC in it to help with chronic pain, PTSD, or some other ailment, then would you rather get your THC products: From a state regulated, medical marijuana program with a doctor’s prescription OR From a smoke shop selling unregulated and untested hemp?”

Among all respondents—600 people in total—72 percent said they would prefer a regulated program, 16 percent said they’d rather go to a smoke shop and 12 percent said they were unsure.

By political party, 79 percent of GOP participants said they favored regulated medical marijuana dispensaries, as did 72 percent of Democrats and 63 percent of independents.

The poll was circulated on Wednesday in a press packet as part of a news conference at the Texas Capitol led by Sen. Roland Gutierrez (D) and the state-licensed medical cannabis company Texas Original. A representative for Texas Original did not immediately respond to a question from Marijuana Moment inquiring about who commissioned the survey.

None one at Wednesday’s press event explicitly addressed the new polling data, though select charts were on display behind the speakers, who included Gutierrez, Texas Original CEO Nico Richardson and a patient and doctor registered under the Texas Compassionate Use Program, known as TCUP.

Gutierrez said at the event that he personally has “always been for a fully regulated—regulated—medical marijuana program and recreational program like we have seen in Colorado, California, Washington State” and others, but he argued that “in order to do that, we have to take the appropriate steps” to regulate or ban synthetic hemp products and halt their availability to minors.

“People at home need to be aware that there is zero age limit in obtaining this,” he said. “You can go to a convenience store right now, be a 14 year old kid and be able to buy a vape pen, and that simply is wrong.”

“All the science will tell you that that 14 year old is not ready for the introduction of cannabis into their body,” the senator continued. “And so we need to do better. And by doing better, we need to find a bill that has some regulation.”

Though the press conference was held just a day after a Senate committee advanced a new bill, SB 5, to outlaw possession, sales and other activity around all hemp products containing any detectable amount of THC or any other cannabinoid besides CBD and CBG, none of the speakers mentioned the measure or specifically called for its passage.

Gutierrez noted during a Q&A session that he voted in favor of SB 3, the hemp ban bill that lawmakers passed during the regular session and was later vetoed by the governor, but he claimed that was because he saw the measure as part of a tradeoff in exchange for expanding the state’s limited medical marijuana program, TCUP, through a separate bill that Abbott ultimately signed into law.

“We need to do better for this program,” he said. “We need to continue the expansion of TCUP and continue to find a…pathway for a completely regulated system—a tiered, regulated system like we have for alcohol.”

Regardless, he repeatedly emphasized that he felt the current situation—in which intoxicating hemp-derived products are widely available in the state—is unworkable.

“To do nothing, which is where we were when this veto began,” Gutierrez said, “is not a tenable situation for the youth of the state of Texas… We cannot have 13-year-old boys, 16-year-old girls, you name it, accessing cannabis with impunity.”

“This might sound strange from the guy that always wanted to legalize marijuana,” he acknowledged, “but we do have to do things appropriately and responsibly.”

Richardson, the Texas Original CEO, made a case at Wednesday’s press conference that the reason TCUP “works and is trusted by physicians and immunocompromised patients is because it is highly regulated,” allowing prescribing physicians and patients to be assured of a product’s purity and potency.

But he noted that stringent regulations in Texas cover the medical marijuana program, requiring that operators have badge access and surveillance systems at facilities, keep inventory in locked steel cages, pay to license and perform background checks on all employees, submit to state inspections, register products in advance of making them available to patients, submit to mandatory lab testing and comply with a host of other rules.

“By comparison,” Richardson said, “hemp-derived THC products do not have to abide by any of the regulations I just listed, even though most of the hemp products sold today in Texas are far more potent than what we are allowed to sell as TCUP medicine.”

The upshot, Richardson and other speakers said, is that untested, unregulated hemp products undercut licensed medical marijuana, ultimately putting patients at risk.

“No one should be surprised that a heavily regulated medical program cannot survive when it has to compete directly with an under-regulated recreational program selling the same or more intoxicating products,” the CEO said.

As lawmakers weigh whether to regulate intoxicating hemp products or ban them altogether, Abbott this week seemed to revise his own stance on the matter, apparently calling for regulated access to low-THC hemp items for adults.

Asked about the proposal, the governor told local media that he stands “in favor of doing all we can to protect the lives of our children, while also protecting the liberty of adults.”

“So the structure of what I’m looking for is this, and that is, we must continue to criminalize marijuana in the state of Texas—no change in the marijuana laws,” he said. “We need to ban THC, as well as hemp products, for children under the age of 21. We don’t want them to be exposed to that.”

He added that the state needs to “ban synthetics that are laced onto hemp products that are extraordinarily dangerous.” But once those safeguards are in place, the governor said, “we need to have a highly regulated hemp industry to ensure that farmers are able to grow it, and that hemp products that do not have an intoxicating level of THC on it and can be sold in the marketplace for adults to be able to use.”

Abbott gave a somewhat confusing definition of what he’d be comfortable with as far as allowable THC limits in hemp, saying there should be a “three percent” or “three milligram” cap, which is a meaningful difference. SB 5, on the other hand, would prohibit products with any quantifiable amount of THC or most other cannabinoids—explicitly exempting CBD and CBG from the ban, but industry stakeholders say that’s logistically unfeasible and would decimate the market.

“To be clear, with regard to adults—again, with minors, no access to it at all. For adults, we do want the THC level to be below 3 percent, or we’re doing it in milligrams, three milligrams of THC, and it’s called non-intoxicating levels of hemp that would be marketed,” he said.

Abbot further said that “every law enforcement official I’ve talked to has said the same thing, and that is, they don’t have the resources to regulate it… If they’re measuring the hemp product not based upon the current methodology, 0.3 percent THC, but on the milligram basis, it’s a whole lot easier to be able to measure it.”

Again, that’s not quite what SB 5 would accomplish—and stakeholders are voicing concern about the expedited legislative process that it’s moving through, urging supporters to contact their representatives and ask them to oppose the legislation.

“Even after hours of compelling testimony, the Senate State Affairs committee voted unanimously to approve SB 5, advancing the bill to the Texas Senate for a vote,” Heather Fazio, director of the Texas Cannabis Policy Center, said in an action alert on Wednesday.

She added that the Senate meets on Thursday and “could vote on SB 5.” However, she added that once it reached the House, “representatives are much more inclined to support regulation.”

(Disclosure: Fazio supports Marijuana Moment’s work via a monthly Patreon pledge.)

Separately, a spokesperson for the governor issued a statement that largely aligns with what Abbott described in the interview.

“Governor Abbott has been clear that Texas must do all we can to protect the lives of children while protecting the liberty of adults. Hemp products should be banned for those under the age of 21, with a full ban on extraordinarily dangerous synthetic products,” they said. “Adults should be able to access heavily regulated, nonintoxicating levels of hemp, and there should be strict legal enforcement of hemp that exceeds 3.0 milligrams total THC per serving. The Governor will continue working with the legislature to establish a framework that meets those goals.”


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.


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Meanwhile, response to questions from senators during Tuesday’s Senate committee hearing, most law enforcement speakers said they supported an all-out ban on hemp products containing any THC rather than attempts at regulation. Some later added, however, that they felt the state’s limited medical marijuana program, known as the Texas Compassionate Use Program (TCUP), should be expanded to ease access by patients—especially military veterans—who could benefit from therapeutic cannabis.

Notably, Abbott in June signed a bill into law that expanded the state’s list of medical cannabis qualifying conditions, adding chronic pain, traumatic brain injury (TBI), Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory bowel diseases, while also allowing end-of-life patients in palliative or hospice care to use marijuana.

SB 5 is among a small handful of bills introduced for the new special session to address consumable hemp products.

Among the other proposals are measures to require extensive product warning labels and limit how hemp products are packaged.

Abbott has specifically asked lawmakers to prioritize hemp regulatory issues during the special session that kicked off on Monday. Two other newly introduced bills are HB 160 from Rep. Charlene Ward Johnson (D) and SB 39 from Sen. Judith Zaffirini (D).

The former would require a number of warning labels to be carried on hemp products with any more than trace amounts of THC, cautioning that the products can cause “cannabis poisoning that can be life-threatening to children,” harm brain development in youth, increase “risk of mental disorders like psychosis and schizophrenia” and lead to anxiety, depression and substance abuse disorders.

SB 39, meanwhile, would prohibit hemp products from being packaged or marketed “in a manner attractive to children,” limiting packaging shaped like humans, animals, fruit, cartoons or “another shape that is attractive to minors” as well as packaging that looks similar to legal products already marketed to children, for example candy or juice. It would also outlaw misleading product packaging. Violations would be a Class A misdemeanor, carrying up to a year in jail and a $4,000 fine.

Separately, last week Rep. Nicole Collier (D) introduced a one-page bill, HB 42, designed to protect consumers in the state from criminal charges if what they believed was a legal hemp product turned out to contain excessive amounts of THC, making it illegal marijuana. It would prevent the criminalization of someone found in possession of a product that’s labeled as hemp but is determined to contain “a controlled substance or marihuana.”

In order for the person to obtain the legal protection, the product would need to have been purchased “from a retailer the person reasonably believed was authorized to sell a consumable hemp product.”

The governor also said last month that rather than ban consumable hemp products outright, he wants to see lawmakers establish a regulatory framework that treats cannabinoids “similar to the way alcohol is regulated.”

Lawmakers at Tuesday’s hearing said that criminalization of possession would only kick in on a person’s third offense, however that provision does not seem to be included in the current version of SB 5.

Ahead of the governor’s recent veto of SB 3, hemp advocates and stakeholders had delivered more than 100,000 petition signatures asking Abbott to reject the measure. Critics of the bill argued that the industry—which employs an estimated 53,000 people—would be decimated if the measure became law.

Texas lawmakers legalized the sale of consumable hemp in 2019, following enactment of the 2018 federal Farm Bill, which legalized the plant nationwide. That led to an explosion of products—including edibles, drinks, vape products and cured flower—now sold by an estimated 8,000 retailers.

Military veterans advocates, including Texas Veterans of Foreign Wars, also called on the governor to veto the hemp ban, saying it “would cause irreversible harm to communities across the state.”

Farmers said the prohibition would devastate a key sector of the state’s agriculture industry.

Following his veto, Abbott proposed an extensive list of policy changes that he said he would support—and which the legislature will have the chance to enact during the special session.

“Texans on each side of the Senate Bill 3 debate raise serious concerns. But one thing is clear—to ensure the highest level of safety for minors, as well as for adults, who obtain a product more dangerous than what they expected, Texas must strongly regulate hemp, and it must do so immediately,” Abbott said.

Part of the rationale behind his veto was the risk of litigation over “valid constitutional challenges” that he suggested would hold up in court. Multiple top Texas hemp companies had already filed a preemptive lawsuit challenging the legislation before the governor’s veto.

“If I were to allow Senate Bill 3 to become law, its enforcement would be enjoined for years, leaving existing abuses unaddressed,” Abbott said in his veto message. “Texas cannot afford to wait.”

Rather than face the possibility of having the law enjoined, or indefinitely delayed, the governor said the state “must enact a regulatory framework that protects public safety, aligns with federal law, has a fully funded enforcement structure, and can take effect without delay.”

Meanwhile, a recent survey from a GOP pollster affiliated with President Donald Trump showed that Texas Democratic and Republican voters are unified in their opposition to the hemp ban bill.

Another poll commissioned the Texas Hemp Business Council (THBC) found that Texas Republican primary voters oppose the proposal.

Last month, the governor signed bill to significantly expand the state’s medical marijuana program with new qualifying conditions additional product forms and more dispensary locations.

Abbott separately signed a bill into law to create a state-backed research consortium to conduct clinical trials on ibogaine as a possible treatment for substance use disorders and other mental health conditions. The ultimate goal of the project is to develop the psychedelic into a prescription drug with federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, with the state retaining a portion of the profit.

The measure expands the state’s list of medical cannabis qualifying conditions to include chronic pain, traumatic brain injury (TBI), Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory bowel diseases, while also allowing end-of-life patients in palliative or hospice care to use marijuana.

Separately in Texas, a House committee approved a Senate-passed bill in May that would prohibit cities from putting any citizen initiative on local ballots that would decriminalize marijuana or other controlled substances—as several localities have already done despite lawsuits from the state attorney general.

Under the proposal, state law would be amended to say that local entities “may not place an item on a ballot, including a municipal charter or charter amendment, that would provide that the local entity will not fully enforce” state drug laws.

While several courts have previously upheld local cannabis decriminalization laws, an appellate court comprised of three conservative justices appointed by the governor has recently pushed back against two of those rulings, siding with the state in its legal challenge to the marijuana policy in Austin and San Marcos.

Despite the ongoing litigation and advancement of the House and Senate bills, Texas activists have their targets set on yet another city, Kyle, where they hope put an initiative before voters to enact local marijuana reform at the ballot this coming November.

A recent poll found that four in five Texas voters want to see marijuana legalized in some form, and most also want to see regulations around cannabis relaxed.

Read the full press packet, including the new poll results, from Wednesday’s event below:

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Rhode Island Officials Pause New Hemp Retailer Licenses As They Study Sales Of THC Drinks In Liquor Stores And Bars

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“If it’s not been tested by a state-certified laboratory, it’s difficult to say [if] what’s on the side of the tin is what people are getting.”

By Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Current

Ten applicants seeking retail hemp licenses may have to wait until next March or longer after the Rhode Island Cannabis Control Commission paused issuing new licenses pending the completion of a study on regulating intoxicating THC beverages sold in liquor stores and bars.

The three-member panel voted unanimously at its monthly meeting last week to temporarily suspend taking applications and granting new licenses for businesses that allow on-site consumption. Liquor stores, bars and restaurants have been able to take part in the legal hemp market since last summer.

As of last Friday, the office had 10 pending initial applications for CBD/hemp retailer or distributor licenses and one retailer pending renewal, commission spokesperson Charon Rose wrote in an email to Rhode Island Current. Rose did not immediately provide the list of hemp vendor applicants.

Matthew Przygoda, the adult non-alcohol category manager for Craft Collective Homegrown Beverage Distributors in Bellingham, Massachusetts, told the commission that halting new licenses disrupts entrepreneurs and small businesses trying to enter the space legally.

“No one is better equipped to verify age and ensure responsible dispensing than our on-premise retailer partners,” he said.

Brian Oakley, who co-owns Julian’s in Providence, asked the commission to reconsider its vote, calling it potentially disruptive to customers who have grown used to seeing THC drinks available in restaurants like his West End neighborhood spot.

Julian’s was granted a license to sell hemp products on December 3, 2024, according to state records.

“I’ve witnessed people come into a bar, restaurant, and are excited when they see the placement of the product,” Oakley said.

Cannabis cultivators oppose allowing THC products to be sold outside licensed pot shops, arguing that products—that mostly come from out-of-state—are not held to the same standards as what’s grown and manufactured in Rhode Island.

“We’ve spent so much time not crossing those two things, THC and alcohol,” Jason Calderon, the vice president and CEO of Bonsai Buds, an Exeter-based cannabis cultivator, told commissioners. “The only benefit that I see are the liquor stores and bar industry having another revenue source.”

Study to look at dosage limits, labeling, protecting kids and more

Lawmakers heard from both sides this spring and held their own debates on what to do about THC drinks already being legally distributed and sold by 120 licensed hemp retailers and distributors.

Ultimately, the General Assembly passed companion resolutions requesting the Cannabis Control Commission conduct a study to come up with recommendations on dosage limits, packaging standards, labeling requirements, licensing conditions, and other ways to ensure children don’t accidentally consume the intoxicating drinks. The measure calls on the commission to “consult with medical experts and appropriate state agencies and departments” including the Department of Health, the Department of Revenue, and the Department of Business Regulation. The commission’s recommendations are due to state lawmakers by March 1, 2026.

The study was written into the state’s fiscal 2026 budget, which took effect July 1. The budget gave the commission new authority to suspend licenses—a power previously held by the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation before the transfer of oversight to the newly-established Cannabis Office.

The halt in new hemp licenses comes as regulators weigh whether to create new frameworks surrounding social consumption, such as the possibility of allowing cannabis cafes.

“It needs more time to be studied, as there are many policy complexities,” Carla Aveledo, policy liaison for the Rhode Island Cannabis Control Commission, told the panel.

THC drinks derived from hemp were illegal in Rhode Island until August 2024, when the state’s Office of Cannabis Regulation began allowing the sale of products containing low levels of delta-9 THC at licensed retailers, including vape shops and liquor stores.

Hemp has been legal at the federal level since 2018. By itself, hemp produces little to no THC, the compound most commonly associated with cannabis intoxication, and is typically non-psychoactive when first harvested—unlike other cannabis plants.

But with the magic of chemistry, delta-9 and less potent delta-8 THC can be produced.

Infusing THC with a drink requires an emulsifier stable with the pH balance of whatever the drink is, as cannabis is typically concentrated into an oil, Stuart Procter, co-founder and lab director for cannabis testing facility PureVita Labs in West Warwick, told commissioners.

But since hemp-derived drinks come from out-of-state, Procter said they’re not guaranteed to all be held to the same standards

“If it’s not been tested by a state-certified laboratory, it’s difficult to say [if] what’s on the side of the tin is what people are getting,” Procter said.

Even slight heat can reduce the product’s potency, Procter said in an interview after the meeting.

“And when you drink it, you don’t get anything,” he said. “So you’d have to drink a lot more.”

This story was first published by Rhode Island Current.

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Broader Launch Of Minnesota’s Marijuana Retail Market Is Almost Here, State Officials Say

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“I don’t think it was anticipated that the tribal program and operations would start so far ahead of non-tribal licenses.”

Amid the coffeeshops and cocktail lounges that dot the intersection of West 25th Street and South Lyndale Avenue in Minneapolis sits the Loon Smoke Shop, where amiable loiterers congregate late into the evening vaping or smoking.

You might soon find a scene like this a few blocks south at the smoke shop’s new dispensary, which is in the final steps of the state cannabis licensing process and is hiring people “passionate” about the marijuana industry.

“We’re currently looking for budtenders, lead budtenders and store managers,” an Instagram post read.

When Gov. Tim Walz (DFL) signed legislation legalizing cannabis in 2023, there was a retail target that stores across the state would open by 2025 at the latest.

As MinnPost has diligently chronicled, that hasn’t happened. Asked last week which of the DFL-controlled Legislature’s myriad laws passed in 2023 is most difficult to implement, Gov. Walz was quick to say legal weed.

That might be changing.

In the last month, the Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) has granted final approval to five retailers to begin selling cannabis, the first such businesses not operated by one of the state’s 11 tribal nations.

By the end of the year Minnesota could see up to 150 marijuana businesses not owned by the tribes, according to Eric Taubel, interim director of the Office of Cannabis Management.

Taubel said in an interview that if a cannabis shop is slow to get off the ground, the weed entrepreneur can no longer blame a cumbersome state licensing process.

“We’ve transitioned to the point where the onus is on the applicant and a prospective business owner,” Taubel said.

Here is an assessment of where Minnesota is in legalizing it.

I want legal marijuana now. Where can I buy it in Minnesota?

Except for drinks at bars and liquor stores infused with hemp-derived THC, the sale of marijuana is still confined to tribal operators.

Returning to Minnesota marijuana legalization 101, the state law permits tribes to determine how they want to oversee grow and sales operations.

“Minnesota is a national leader in its approach to cannabis and tribal nations,” Taubel said. “Gov. Walz and Lt. Gov. Flanagan have been leaders in what tribes can do and recognize their inherent sovereignty.”

As a result, Minnesotans can stop reading this article and drive right now to retailers on tribal lands. Stores have been open since August 2023 when the Red Lake Nation opened a dispensary.

The law also lets these tribes operate pot businesses outside reservation land if they agree to an overall regulatory compact with the Office of Cannabis Management. The first such compact was finalized in May with the White Earth Nation, which has since opened stores in St. Cloud and Moorhead.

“I don’t think any other state has a model like this,” said Leila Fatehi, a lawyer at Blunt Strategies, an aptly named Minneapolis-based law firm representing pot businesses. “I don’t think it was anticipated that the tribal program and operations would start so far ahead of non-tribal licenses.”

What about the five non-tribal licenses you mentioned?

The Office of Cannabis Management granted final approval in June for a company called Herb-Quest to operate a cultivation center in Pine County.

Then this week, Concentrate Labs, doing business as Roots and Resin Farm, got the state’s greenlight to open its own cultivation site in Chisago County.

And The Smoking Tree, Loon Lab Extracts and Research (not to be confused with Loon Dispensary), and Fairwater Farm nabbed licenses to sell pot in the cities of Albert Lea, Isanti and Plainview respectively.

These five businesses not only cleared state hurdles but also went through the county and city approval process, more or less.

Jacob Schlichter, founder of the Smoking Tree, told MinnPost that he must still get final permission at a July 28 Albert Lea City Council meeting. But Schlichter described this step as a formality. He fully expects to open his shop in the coming weeks.

What is this I’m seeing about cannabis state lotteries?

In June, 249 applicants won a lottery held by the Office of Cannabis Management, including the aforementioned Lyndale Avenue Loon dispensary.

Each winner qualified for social equity status, whose criteria can include veteran status, being a victim of the war on drugs, or coming from a high-poverty area.

On Tuesday, the office held a second lottery with 75 winners out of 569 applicants, a pool that included applicants who did not qualify for equity status.

But winning these lotteries is just one step in the path toward a state license. Though city and county governments are not legally permitted to reject a pot business, they can put forth requirements, such as a store being a certain distance away from a school.

“Each municipality handles zoning differently,” Taubel acknowledged. “The county and city may only meet every month.”

The Cannabis Management interim director described a “checker board” of additional steps, including submitting to a criminal background check (While the state wants to help victims of stern drug possession laws, they do not want to assist convicted white-collar criminals) and a labor agreement that affords employees rights in exchange for no pickets, boycotts or strikes at the cannabis business.

Once lottery winners jump through these hoops, they can apply with the state for final approval.

So why weren’t recreational cannabis stores opened by 2025 at the latest?

Walz attributed delays in part to shifting leadership at the Office of Cannabis Management.  In January, one interim director, Charlene Briner, was replaced by another interim head, Taubel. And before Briner, there was a botched hire in 2023 that led to a review by the Office of the Legislative Auditor.

(Walz said of Taubel, “I think he’s done a fantastic job.” But the governor declined to say whether he will be named permanent director.)

The governor also said, “There really was not a model of how to do it,” adding that each of the 22 states preceding Minnesota in legalizing pot “have struggled to a certain degree.”

The model the state chose is also an unusual one.

“In Minnesota, the rollout has been a bit slower than in other states, which relied on incumbent medical marijuana dispensaries,” Fatehi said. “Minnesota created a framework to have a larger pool of applicants.”

That choice is now bearing fruit, Taubel said, as dozens of legal pot stores, many founded by entrepreneurs new to the industry, should come online by the end of the year.

One concern of some non-tribal businesses is that the tribes got too much of a headstart. Fatehi was skeptical of this line of thinking. But she did say early Minnesota retailers are likely to buy from tribal cultivators.

Another worry is that legal weed becomes too expensive. A state budget otherwise conspicuous in its absence of new revenue raised the cannabis tax from 10 percent to 15 percent.

Including state and local sales tax, customers will pay north of a 20 percent levy on each cannabis purchase.

“There is absolutely an enormous cause of concern that it is taxed too high,” Fatehi said.

Taubel defended the tax as “middle of the road” compared to other states. (It is a very long metaphorical road. Per the Tax Foundation, Connecticut has the lowest weed excise tax at 3 percent. Washington State sports the highest at 37 percent.)

“I’m a little suspect that the 5 percent increase will have substantial ripple effects,” Taubel said.

MinnPost reporter Brian Arola contributed to this story. 

This article first appeared on MinnPost and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.

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Bipartisan Coalition Of 32 Attorneys General Pushes Congress To Urgently Pass Marijuana Banking Bill

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A bipartisan coalition of 32 state and territory attorneys general from across the U.S. are calling on Congress to pass a marijuana banking bill to free up financial services access for licensed cannabis businesses.

In a letter sent to House and Senate leaders on Thursday— led by the attorneys general from Washington, D.C., Georgia, Maryland and Ohio—the officials said they want to see the Secure and Fair Enforcement Regulation (SAFER) Banking Act taken up this session.

“We are a bipartisan group of state and territorial attorneys general who, like you, have a strong interest in protecting the physical and economic wellbeing of our constituents while enabling economic growth and stability in our respective states,” the letter says. “We therefore urge Congress to advance this legislation, which will increase access to regulated banking and financial services for state-regulated cannabis businesses in jurisdictions that have legalized these businesses.”

“It is increasingly critical to move cannabis commerce into the regulated banking system. The majority of states and several territories have legalized some use of cannabis,” it says. “As more states continue to consider and implement legalization efforts, the lack of access to America’s financial system by cannabis businesses—which is a direct result of federal banking law—presents a considerable safety issue for the public.”

The officials stressed that, under current federal policy, many marijuana businesses are forced to operate on a largely cash-only basis, making them targets for crime and putting employees and customers “at greater risk.”

“Allowing access to the nation’s regulated banking system is crucial to public safety and to ensuring that lawful businesses in our states have access to regulated banking services,” they wrote.

The letter also states that the current lack of banking access for the cannabis industry makes tax collection and oversight more challenging, and the SAFER Banking Act “would help ensure that state governments do not forfeit hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue that the cannabis industry generates.”

However, despite the attorneys general saying at the top of the letter that they’re voicing support for the “SAFER Banking Act of 2025,” the bill has not yet been reintroduced this session, so it’s unclear whether any provisions might be changed from the prior version that died at the end of the last Congress.

“To address these challenges, we request that Congress advance the SAFER Banking Act or similar legislation. Congress should provide a safe harbor for depository institutions that provide a financial product or service to a covered business in a state that has implemented laws and regulation that ensure accountability in the cannabis industry. An effective safe harbor would bring billions of dollars into the banking sector, enabling law enforcement, federal, state, and local tax agencies, and cannabis regulators in the states and territories to more effectively monitor cannabis businesses and their transactions. Compliance with tax laws would be simpler and easier to enforce with the regulated tracking of funds in the banking system, resulting in higher tax revenues.”

“The SAFER Banking Act is common-sense, bipartisan, and will beneficially impact the safety of the nearly 75 percent of Americans who live in a state where cannabis has been legalized,” the letter concludes. “The bill respects both state sovereignty and the current status of cannabis at the federal level. It does not encourage legalization, nor does it facilitate cannabis sales in states that have chosen not to legalize it.”

“The SAFER Banking Act simply addresses the specific public policy challenges facing states in light of the federal prohibition on banking cannabis-related funds, and it does so in a way that will help move cash from legal cannabis businesses into the highly regulated banking system, where it will be more transparent to state regulators and law enforcement,” it says. “We look forward to working on this bipartisan issue with you.”

The other signatories on the letter are the attorneys general of Alaska, American Samoa, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawai’i, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Northern Mariana Islands, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, U.S. Virgin Islands, Utah, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia.

“When legal cannabis businesses are forced to operate in cash, it’s not just inefficient–it’s dangerous,” Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes (D) said in a press release. “The SAFER Banking Act is a practical solution that will protect workers and communities while ensuring Arizona can effectively collect taxes and oversee this growing industry.”

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel (D) said that, “By reducing the risk of crime and improving tax compliance through access to regulated financial services, the SAFER Banking Act has the ability to enhance both public safety and transparency.”

“With billions in revenue, giving cannabis businesses a secure place to bank isn’t just smart policy—it’s common sense,” she said.

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser (D), meanwhile, said he’s “been urging Congress to allow cannabis companies to access the commercial banking system for years because of the safety risks many cannabis companies take on simply to do business.”

“This commonsense reform will also make it easier for Colorado to oversee the industry, better protecting consumers, public safety, and public health,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Democratic Senate sponsor of the marijuana banking bill recently said that, despite efforts to coordinate meetings around the legislation, other priorities have taken precedence for now.

Asked about recent comments Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-OH)—the lead GOP sponsor of the SAFER Banking Act this session who told Marijuana Moment that he doesn’t expect the bill to come up until this fall—Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) said, “Hopefully sooner than later in my mind.”

In January, the office of Rep. Dave Joyce (R-OH), who is again leading the effort on the House said, told Marijuana Moment that he would be filing the cannabis banking legislation this session but that its introduction was “not imminent” as some earlier reports had suggested.

A leading anti-marijuana group recently sounded the alarm about a possible attempt to put the cannabis banking measure in a cryptocurrency bill that was advancing on the Senate floor, but that didn’t come to fruition.

With Republicans in control of both chambers and key leadership positions filled by opponents of marijuana legalization, it’s been an open question about whether any cannabis reform legislation stands a chance of passage in the short-term. That’s despite the fact that President Donald Trump endorsed marijuana industry banking access, federal rescheduling and a Florida legalization initiative on the campaign trail. However, he’s been silent on the issue since taking office.

On the House side, a Republican lawmaker said in March he’s hopeful that Congress will be able to get a marijuana banking bill across “the finish line” this session, arguing that the current barriers to financial services for the industry represent a “second tier” of prohibition.

Cannabis industry banking challenges came up in several congressional hearings in March, including a Senate Banking Committee meeting on debanking where senators on both sides of the aisle addressed the lack of financial services access for marijuana businesses.

Meanwhile, in January congressional researchers released a report detailing the subject of debanking—while making a point to address how the marijuana industry’s financial services access problem “sits at the nexus” of a state-federal policy conflict that complicates the debate.

Separately, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) announced in December that it’s convening focus groups comprised of marijuana businesses to better understand their experiences with access to banking services under federal prohibition.


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.

The industry remains frustrated with the lack of progress on the cannabis banking issue under the last administration.

A Senate source told Marijuana Moment in December that Republican House and Senate leadership “openly and solely blocked” then-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s (D-NY) attempt to include the bill in a government funding bill as the session came to a close.

Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) had challenged the idea that there was enough GOP support for the SAFER Banking Act to pass on the Senate floor during the lame duck session.

Warren accused certain Republican members of overstating support for the legislation within their caucus, while also taking a hit at Trump for doing “nothing” on cannabis reform during his time in office as he makes a policy pivot ahead of the election by coming out in support of the marijuana banking bill and federal rescheduling.

Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-CO) also recently argued in an interview with Marijuana Moment that the main barrier to getting the marijuana banking bill across the finish line is a lack of sufficient Republican support in the chamber. And he said if Trump is serious about seeing the reform he recently endorsed enacted, he needs to “bring us some Republican senators.”

Prior to becoming House speaker, Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) consistently opposed cannabis reform, including on incremental issues like cannabis banking and making it easier to conduct scientific research on the plant.

Meanwhile, on the one-year anniversary of a Senate committee’s passage of the SAFER Banking Act in September, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released an analysis on the economic impact of the reform, including the likely increase in federally insured deposits from cannabis businesses by billions of dollars once banks receive protections for servicing the industry.

Separately, the CEO of the financial giant JPMorgan Chase said recently that the company “probably would” start providing banking services to marijuana businesses if federal law changed to permit it.

Marijuana Moment is made possible with support from readers. If you rely on our cannabis advocacy journalism to stay informed, please consider a monthly Patreon pledge.

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