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DEA links cannabis to depression and suicide after Trump’s pick sworn in (Newsletter: August 1, 2025)

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Senate hemp amendment to ban synthetics; VA secretary on psychedelics; DE gov tours marijuana grow; Another PA legalization bill

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/ TOP THINGS TO KNOW

The Drug Enforcement Administration promoted an article claiming that “cannabis use increases depressive and suicidal thinking”—shortly after new administrator Terrance Cole was sworn in.

Bipartisan senators told Marijuana Moment they’re confident a final deal on rules for hemp THC products will be reached, as Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) filed a new amendment that would ban synthetic cannabinoid products.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins says he “opened that door” to psychedelic therapy access “wider than most ever thought” was possible, and discussed how he is collaborating on the issue with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer (D) toured a marijuana cultivation facility ahead of Friday’s recreational sales launch, saying the state will produce “the French wine of weed.”

  • “The quality of production…is so high quality that people will know, hey, if it comes from Delaware, it’s good, safe stuff.”

Pennsylvania representatives are circulating a memo to build support for another bill to legalize marijuana sales through state-run stores, arguing that “permitting private companies to sell cannabis in Pennsylvania could allow large corporations to take over the cannabis industry, putting profits before the well-being of our communities.”

A new government-funded study in Japan found that marijuana use “typically follows alcohol and tobacco, and rarely leads to further drug use,” concluding that “these findings challenge the gateway hypothesis.”

  • “We did not observe patterns that support the gateway drug hypothesis.”

/ FEDERAL

Customs and Border Protection has detained for over a week a Korean-born researcher and longtime U.S. legal permanent resident who is studying a vaccine for Lyme disease, apparently due to a 2011 minor marijuana charge.

/ STATES

North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein (D) tweeted, “North Carolina’s unregulated cannabis market is crying out for order. I look forward to hearing from the Advisory Council on Cannabis as we work toward creating a safe, legal market for adults that protects kids.”

Texas’s lieutenant governor touted the Senate’s initial approval of a bill to ban hemp products with any amount of THC.

Alabama regulators are working to draft rules to enforce a new state law restricting hemp products.

California regulators sent guidance about upcoming changes to contact types within cannabis licensing systems.

Missouri regulators distributed another $23.6 million in marijuana revenue to veterans, public defender and drug treatment programs.

U.S. Virgin Islands regulators are holding information sessions about the marijuana dispensary business license application process.

Colorado regulators will hold a meeting about draft changes to marijuana rules on Tuesday.

Rhode Island regulators will host a cannabis social equity applicant workshop on Tuesday.


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


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

/ LOCAL

The Albert Lea, Minnesota City Council voted against registering what would be the state’s first licensed recreational marijuana dispensary.

The Yakima County, Washington State Commission voted to place a nonbinding measure on the November ballot about whether a local ban on cannabis dispensaries should be repealed.

/ INTERNATIONAL

The German Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices issued the first-ever approval for compassionate use of psilocybin in the European Union.

A court held a hearing challenging the Canadian government’s decision to end British Columbia’s drug decriminalization pilot less than halfway through its planned three-year duration.

/ SCIENCE & HEALTH

A study found that “converting underutilized cannabis waste into valuable nanomaterials…presents an innovative approach to resource optimization in the cannabis sector, contributing to the principles of a circular economy.”

A study found that “CBD not only exerts antioxidant effects against cobalt chloride but also reduces [intraocular pressure] and preserves [retinal ganglion cells] when [CBD nanoparticles] was applied topically, thereby providing neuroprotection in an [ocular hypertension] glaucoma rat model.”

/ ADVOCACY, OPINION & ANALYSIS

The Drug Policy Alliance published a report on focus groups it conducted about state-level marijuana reform’s lessons learned and ongoing challenges.

The U.S. Hemp Roundtable launched a petition to thank Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) for fighting to remove hemp product ban language from appropriations legislation.

/ BUSINESS

AYR Wellness Inc. entered into a restructuring agreement that anticipates an “orderly sale and/or wind-down of the Company’s remaining assets.”

A National Labor Relations Board ordered Curaleaf to rehire an employee who claims he was terminated for unionizing efforts.

SNDL Inc. reported quarterly net revenue of C$244.8 million.

The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company’s cannabis-focused Hawthorne unit reported quarterly net sales of $31.2 million.

Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox.

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.

Become a patron at Patreon!



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The Cannabist Co. Divests Dispensary Footprint in Pennsylvania

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[PRESS RELEASE] – NEW YORK, Aug. 18, 2025 – The Cannabist Co. Holdings Inc., one of the most experienced cultivators, manufacturers and retailers of cannabis products in the U.S., announced the successful closing of the sale of its Pennsylvania affiliate that owns the medical dispensaries to VP Investment Holdings LLC. VP Holdings is comprised of principals from a leading privately held dispensary operator in Pennsylvania, Restore Integrative Wellness Center LLC.

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The sale will include a concurrent supply agreement with VP Holdings for products produced by Cannabist’s grow/processing affiliate, Green Leaf Medicals LLC (gLeaf). This strategic Pennsylvania transaction accelerates The Cannabist Co.’s wholesale cultivation presence by enhancing the commercialization of its state-of-the-art grow-processor facility located in Saxton, Pa., while continuing to serve the broader medical market through high-quality medical marijuana.

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Pennsylvania Transaction Highlights

  • VP Holdings acquired Columbia Care Pennsylvania LLC from Columbia Care LLC via an equity purchase agreement for approximately $10 million in cash paid at closing.
  • Columbia Care Pennsylvania’s three operational medical dispensaries are located in Scranton, Allentown and Wilkes-Barre, Pa. VP Holdings expects to rebrand all three locations to the Restore brand immediately.
  • As additional consideration, VP Holdings and Restore have entered into a supply agreement with The Cannabist Co. (through gLeaf), thereby expanding The Cannabist Co.’s wholesale distribution footprint in Pennsylvania.
  • The Cannabist Co. will continue to enhance and expand its wholesale presence in-state by driving the performance of its Saxton grow-processor facility.

The Cannabist Co. Management Commentary

“This Pennsylvania transaction is a clear example of executing on our strategic plan to simplify our business and optimize existing assets, while delivering immediate financial benefits,” CEO David Hart said. “We’ve taken a proactive and thoughtful step that strengthens our balance sheet, bolsters liquidity and enhances our operational focus. By divesting our retail footprint in Pennsylvania for all cash and entering into a meaningful wholesale agreement, we are now better positioned to optimize our best-in-class Saxton cultivation facility and expand distribution of our high-quality products to patients across the state. This transaction positions us to better capitalize on the current medical landscape and future opportunities in a potential adult-use market.”

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CLD Advisory served as exclusive financial adviser, and Foley Hoag LLP served as legal adviser, while Cannabis Law Solutions served as Pennsylvania regulatory counsel to The Cannabist Co. Ballard Spahr LLP acted as legal adviser to Restore.



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New York State Faces Lawsuit After Cannabis Regulators Admit Measuring Mistake

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A group of licensed cannabis dispensaries in New York is suing state regulators over a rule change that threatens to shutter or relocate dozens of businesses.

The lawsuit, filed Aug. 15 in State Supreme Court in Albany, argues that the state’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) abruptly reinterpreted a law requiring cannabis shops to be at least 500 feet from schools. Since 2022, regulators measured that distance from one entrance to another. In July 2025, officials said the law should have been measured from a school’s property line, a correction that rendered at least 152 dispensaries noncompliant according to the New York Times and the Associated Press.

Who Is Suing

The twelve petitioners include seven licensed businesses that are open or fully approved (ConBud, The Cannabis Place, Summit Canna, Hush, High Fade, Housing Works Cannabis Co., and Common Courtesy Dispensary) and five provisionally licensed applicants, Rezidue, Elise Pelka, Toastree, Monarch NYC, and Luxe Leaf Boutique. The businesses span Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx, as reported by Cannabis Business Times.

The Lawsuit’s Arguments

The complaint states that regulators “poured their life savings into launching their businesses” after approvals from the state, only to be told their locations are now in violation. Petitioners say OCM changed its interpretation of the law without a formal rulemaking process, violating the State Administrative Procedure Act. They also argue that the change strips them of due process and equal protection.

“Relying on those approvals, petitioners poured their life savings into launching their businesses,” the complaint says. “They signed leases, completed build-outs, hired employees and opened their doors to the public under the state’s very detailed framework. But now, in a complete about-face, OCM incredulously claims it got the law wrong all along.”

Attorney Jorge Luis Vasquez Jr., who represents the plaintiffs, said the harm goes far beyond money. “This is way more than just financial harm to small businesses,” Vasquez told Gothamist. “This goes beyond money. This is time. This is resources. This is energy. This is building relationships with communities.”

The Stakes

State officials acknowledged the mistake affects 108 licensees and 44 provisional applicants. The OCM has told licensed businesses they can stay open for now, but cannot renew licenses until lawmakers act. Provisional applicants will need to relocate, with access to a $15 million fund that offers up to $250,000 each, according to Gothamist and the AP.

For many dispensary owners, that relief falls far short. The lawsuit cites buildout costs between $500,000 and $1 million per business, plus millions more in operational expenses. Several plaintiffs signed personal guarantees on leases, creating a risk of bankruptcy if they are forced to move, Cannabis Business Times reported.

Equity Concerns

Eleven of the twelve plaintiffs hold conditional adult-use retail dispensary (CAURD) licenses, reserved for justice-involved New Yorkers, and one holds a social and economic equity license. Plaintiffs argue the rule change undermines the state’s promise to prioritize those harmed by prohibition.

“OCM’s reinterpreted rule disproportionately harms these stakeholders and licensees and undermines the very purpose of this law,” the complaint states.

In a joint statement sent to High Times, the coalition Save New York Legal Cannabis for All said that licensed cannabis operators “have worked in good faith, invested their life savings, and followed the rules set forth by the State.” The group, which includes ConBud, The Cannabis Place, Rezidue, Summit Canna, Hush, High Fade, Elise Pelka, Housing Works Cannabis Co., Common Courtesy Dispensary, Toastree, and Monarch NYC, warned that OCM’s announcement threatens the small business owners and equity licensees who form “the backbone of this industry.”

“OCM was supposed to follow a multistep process laid out by law before making such an earth-shattering determination, yet it completely failed to do so,” the statement reads. “Worse, OCM’s proposed ‘solution’ to the damage caused by its carelessness will not actually help us. This so-called solution… still leaves licensees out of compliance, and when a cannabis business is out of compliance, it cannot access banking, real estate, or investment—no matter what the state says.”

The coalition said the lawsuit was filed “to ensure every licensed operator is protected and given a fair path to compliance and success,” and called on lawmakers to adopt a “functional solution that includes all operators, safeguards investments, and fulfills the promise of a truly equitable cannabis program that benefits all New Yorkers.”

State Response

OCM Acting Executive Director Felicia Reid apologized to affected businesses and said legislative intervention is needed to allow them to remain in place, according to the New York Times. Gov. Kathy Hochul called the error “a major screw-up” and promised to work with lawmakers to keep dispensaries open. A spokesperson for Hochul told Gothamist the governor “has been clear that she will work with the Legislature to ensure these hardworking businesses are able to continue to operate without interruption.”

Despite the turmoil, New York’s regulated cannabis market is expected to reach $1 billion in sales this year. But with hundreds of equity-focused businesses now facing relocation or closure, industry leaders warn that the proximity dispute could further destabilize an already rocky rollout.

Photo by Luca Bravo on Unsplash



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More Young Adults Are Opting For Cannabis Drinks Over Alcohol At After-Work Happy Hours, Poll Shows

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Younger Americans are increasingly using cannabis-infused beverages as a substitute for alcohol—with one in three millennials and Gen Z workers choosing THC drinks over booze for after-work activities like happy hours, according to a new poll.

The survey from Drug Rehab USA assessed the recreational preferences of 1,000 employed adults, finding more evidence that as the marijuana legalization movement achieves greater success and as awareness of alcohol-related harms has spread, a significant portion of those generations are opting for cannabis over booze.

All told, 66 percent of American adults say they’ve tried alcohol alternatives over the past six months. And 24 percent of respondents said they’ve “at least partially” replaced alcohol with non-alcohol or cannabis-based drinks.

That trend is being led by millennials and Gen Z, one of three of whom said they used THC beverages instead of alcohol drinks.

“To unwind after work, 45 percent drink alcohol, while 24 percent use nicotine, 20 percent turn to cannabis, and 16 percent choose alcohol alternatives like mocktails, non-alcoholic beer, or CBD,” the survey found.

“When it comes to winding down after a long day, Americans are reaching for a mix of familiar comforts and emerging alternatives,” Drug Rehab USA said. “While alcohol still dominates, the competition between nicotine and cannabis shows how habits are evolving across generations.”

“After-work rituals are no longer limited to a nightly drink—or even to alcohol at all. From THC-infused beverages to nicotine pouches and non-alcoholic alternatives, today’s habits reflect a broader redefinition of what it means to unwind. While motivations vary—stress, routine, social connection—the through-line is clear: Americans are turning to consumable rituals to draw a line between work and rest. For many, those rituals begin within the hour and recur multiple times a week.”

The survey findings largely track with other research assessing emerging trends in cannabis and alcohol use.

For example, a recent rodent study determined that the cannabinoid CBD reduces rates of binge drinking and alcohol blood concentrations.

Results of a separate study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry also indicated that a single, 800-milligram dose of CBD can help manage certain alcohol cravings among people with alcohol use disorder (AUD), supporting the use of the marijuana component as a potential treatment option for problem drinkers.

Federally funded research into the effects of cannabis on alcohol use that was published in May also found that people who used marijuana immediately before drinking subsequently consumed fewer alcoholic beverages and reported lower cravings for alcohol.

The study follows a separate survey analysis published in March that found that three in four young adults reported substituting cannabis for alcohol at least once per week—a “fast-emerging” trend that reflects the “rapid expansion” of the hemp product marketplace.

The report from Bloomberg Intelligence (BI) found that, across various demographics, cannabis is increasingly being used as an alternative to alcohol and even non-alcoholic beverages as more companies—including major multi-state marijuana operators (MSOs)—expand their offerings.

The findings were largely consist with a growing body of studies indicating that cannabis—whether federally legal hemp or still-prohibited marijuana—is being utilized as a substitute for many Americans amid the reform movement.

An earlier survey from YouGov, for example, found that a majority of Americans believe regular alcohol consumption is more harmful than regular marijuana use. Even so, more adults said they personally prefer drinking alcohol to consuming cannabis despite the health risks.

A separate poll released in January determined that more than half of marijuana consumers say they drink less alcohol, or none at all, after using cannabis.

Yet another survey—which was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and released in December—found that young adults are nearly three times more likely to use marijuana than alcohol on a daily or near-daily basis.

That poll provided more granular, age-specific findings than a similar report published last year, finding that more Americans overall smoke marijuana on a daily basis than drink alcohol every day—and that alcohol drinkers are more likely to say they would benefit from limiting their use than cannabis consumers are.

A separate study published in the journal Addiction last year similarly found that there are more U.S. adults who use marijuana daily than who drink alcohol every day.

In December, BI also published the results of a survey indicating that substitution of cannabis for alcohol is “soaring” as the state-level legalization movement expands and relative perceptions of harm shift. A significant portion of Americans also said in that poll that they substitute marijuana for cigarettes and painkillers.

Another BI analysis from last September projected that the expansion of the marijuana legalization movement will continue to post 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.

Yet another study on the impact of marijuana consumption on people’s use of other drugs that was released in December suggested that, for many, cannabis may act as a less-dangerous substitute, allowing people to reduce their intake of substances such as alcohol, methamphetamine and opioids like morphine.

A study out of Canada, where marijuana is federally legal, found that legalization was “associated with a decline in beer sales,” suggesting a substitution effect.

The analyses comport with other recent survey data that more broadly looked at American views on marijuana versus alcohol. For example, a Gallup survey found that respondents view cannabis as less harmful than alcohol, tobacco and nicotine vapes—and more adults now smoke cannabis than smoke cigarettes.

A separate survey released by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and Morning Consult last June also found that Americans consider marijuana to be significantly less dangerous than cigarettes, alcohol and opioids—and they say cannabis is less addictive than each of those substances, as well as technology.

Meanwhile, a leading alcohol industry association is calling on Congress to dial back language in a House committee-approved 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.

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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