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Nebraska Governor Pushes Officials To Enact Medical Marijuana Cultivation Cap

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6 days agoon

“Leaving the cultivators without a limit would increase [the] likelihood of an overabundance of cannabis product that creates an unregulated, unintended black-market supply.”
By Zach Wendling, Nebraska Examiner
The Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission will cap cultivators for the new medicine to grow no more than 1,250 flowering plants at one time, adding a limit that the governor had requested.
Gov. Jim Pillen (R), in a Thursday letter to the five-member commission, said while he appreciated commissioners’ work to “ensure the cannabis industry is properly regulated,” he would not sign new emergency regulations the commission approved September 2 without the group setting a limit on how many plants cannabis cultivators grow.
“Leaving the cultivators without a limit would increase [the] likelihood of an overabundance of cannabis product that creates an unregulated, unintended black-market supply,” Pillen wrote.
He continued: “If an inclusion of plant population limits for permitted cultivators can be included, I will support the remainder of the proposed emergency regulations to go into effect.”
Last week, the commission said it would license only four medical cannabis cultivators. The first round of cultivator applications meeting the new regulations are due by September 23. Licensing must begin by October 1.
Placeholder limits expanded
The Medical Cannabis Commission built its discussion on top of a placeholder draft put forward by Bo Botelho, the general counsel for the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services who is advising the commission pursuant to an inter-agency agreement.
DHHS has opposed medical cannabis in the past, which is why advocates sought and ultimately won voter approval to house the new Medical Cannabis Commission elsewhere, that being the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission.
Botelho said he worked backward from Missouri’s plant limits, noting the neighboring state grows plants for recreational and medicinal use. He proposed a much more stringent limit than allowed in the neighboring Show-Me State.
He had proposed the following placeholder limits:
- Indoor facilities: 200 flowering plants.
- Outdoor facilities: 500 flowering plants.
- Greenhouse facilities: 300 flowering plants.
- A combination of the three types: 200 flowering plants.
“The numbers that I came to isn’t the result of any real math,” Botelho said. “I just put some numbers in there to start with.”
Commissioner Bruce Bailey of Lincoln led a push to increase the number of plants allowed. He noted some plants might be lost to crop failure while others might not meet new commission testing requirements. Bailey said he also wanted to be sure there was enough supply for Nebraska patients.
Four of Nebraska’s six bordering states have legal medical cannabis programs, with the percentage of residents in those states using the programs as follows: Iowa, 0.55 percent; Colorado, 1.05 percent; South Dakota, 1.26 percent; and Missouri, 1.95 percent, according to the Marijuana Policy Project.
Using a rough ratio of one plant serving every two patients, Bailey and other commissioners worked toward serving approximately 1 percent of the state, or a prospective 20,000 Nebraskans.
Meeting patient demand
Commissioner Lorelle Mueting of Gretna, an addiction prevention specialist with Heartland Family Service, said Nebraska also might not have 20,000 patients “right off the bat,” and joined with Commissioner Kim Lowe of Kearney, voicing an intent to review the numbers in the future.
Mueting said that in the limited time between Pillen’s Thursday decision not to sign on and the commission’s “emergency” Monday meeting, she had researched that 2,000 indoor plants might be able to produce enough tinctures for 2,300 patients each year.
“I don’t know how all this translates into plants, because, again…how much flower a plant can produce depends on how it’s grown, how it’s cultivated,” Mueting said.
Rather than set specific limits for indoor, outdoor or greenhouse facilities, Bailey proposed the 1,250 plant limit, no matter the type of facility. That would mean that with a total of four cultivators, there could be 5,000 active plants at once with two harvests anticipated annually, meeting the 10,000 plant goal.
Crista Eggers, executive director of Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana, the nonprofit that led the successful 2024 petition campaign, said the commission was going to “starve” a program before it could start.
“On your hands will be the blood of the patients in the state,” she said.
Lia Post of Springfield, who has complex regional pain syndrome, again urged the commission to see her and other Nebraskans as patients.
“My illness doesn’t change at state lines,” Post said. “I guarantee you I’m going to use cannabis instead of opioids or benzodiazepines or sedatives or ketamine, and if the most offensive thing I can do is cuss at you or tell you what a bunch of idiots you are, freedom of speech has gone to hell in Nebraska.”
The Medical Cannabis Commission is scheduled to meet next at 1 p.m. on September 30.
What would the latest medical cannabis emergency regulations mean?
If approved, the latest set of emergency medical cannabis regulations would replace an earlier set that would expire by September 28. The new set would be in effect for a new 90-day period.
The latest regulations would establish a “Recommending Health Care Practitioner Directory” and also make Nebraska’s program essentially a low-THC variety.
Under the regulations, patients or caregivers could purchase up to 5 ounces of medical cannabis in a 30-day period, which is about 142 grams. Of that, patients could purchase no more than 5 grams of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) from the same dispensary within a 90-day period. Delta-9 THC is the part of cannabis most associated with a “high.”
The amended regulations would maintain a limit of up to 12 medical cannabis dispensaries statewide arranged by judicial district. That would mean one dispensary each in Douglas County (584,526 residents), Lancaster County (322,608 residents), Sarpy/Cass Counties (217,202 residents) and Buffalo/Hall Counties (112,979 residents), according to 2020 census data.
The rules would still prohibit dispensaries from selling smoking or vaping products and edibles of any kind. While the earlier rules would have allowed the sale of non-sugarcoated gelatinous cubes, the revised rules would not. Oral tablets with a “thin layer” of flavoring to make the products swallowable would now be allowed.
Under current law, a patient or qualified caregiver with a recommendation from any health care practitioner can legally possess up to 5 ounces of medical cannabis, in any form. But no licenses have yet been issued, so cannabis can’t legally be purchased in Nebraska yet.
This story was first published by Nebraska Examiner.
Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Verano Proposes to Redomicile Parent Company From British Columbia to Nevada

Published
39 seconds agoon
September 15, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – CHICAGO, Sept. 15, 2025 – Verano Holdings Corp., a leading multistate cannabis company, announced that the company’s board of directors approved, and the company will be seeking shareholder approval of, a proposed plan to redomicile Verano Holdings Corp. from British Columbia, Canada, to the state of Nevada.
Verano believes that redomiciling in the United States better aligns with its U.S.-based business and operations and streamlines its organizational and regulatory structure within the United States, among other reasons discussed in the preliminary proxy statement filed by the company on Sept. 12, 2025, with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and in Canada on SEDAR+ (the “preliminary proxy statement”).
“Since inception and our 2021 go-public transaction, we’ve focused on ways to unlock shareholder value and create potential catalysts for the business, including enhancements to our corporate structure and executing a capital markets strategy that positions Verano to capitalize on near and long-term growth opportunities,” Verano Chairman and CEO George Archos said. “From our 2023 strategic decision to list company shares on Cboe Canada, a senior U.S.-based exchange with global operations, to our redomiciling in the U.S. as a newly-registered Nevada enterprise, we are prepared to leverage opportunities that benefit the company and our shareholders.”
The company’s plan to redomicile Verano Holdings Corp. in the United States is not expected to materially impact its existing manufacturing and retail business, which spans 13 U.S. states, including the location of its corporate headquarters in Chicago.
Pursuant to the company’s proposed plan of arrangement, Verano will continue from the jurisdiction of British Columbia, Canada, to the jurisdiction of the state of Nevada (the “continuance”). Upon completion of the continuance, the issued and outstanding subordinate voting shares of the British Columbia-formed Verano Holdings Corp. will automatically be exchanged on a one-for-one basis for shares of common stock of the continued Verano Holdings Corp. domiciled in Nevada (“Nevada common stock”). Each of the company’s outstanding stock options and restricted stock units will be deemed to be adjusted pursuant to the terms of the company’s stock and equity incentive plan to become a stock option and a restricted stock unit to receive an equal number of shares of Nevada common stock, respectively.
The preliminary proxy statement was filed in connection with a proposed special meeting of the company’s shareholders to consider and, if thought advisable, approve a plan of arrangement implementing the continuance. The company’s board of directors may, at any time, including after receiving shareholder approval, in its discretion, decide not to proceed with the arrangement and not complete the continuance.
Upon completion of the continuance, the Nevada common stock will trade on the Cboe Canada exchange under the company’s existing ticker symbol, “VRNO,” and be quoted on the OTCQX under the symbol “VRNOF.”
For more information on Verano Holdings Corp., visit the company’s investor website: https://investors.verano.com/.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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New York Lawmakers Schedule Psychedelics-Focused Hearing To Discuss ‘Medicinal Value And Risks’ Of Psilocybin

Published
1 hour agoon
September 15, 2025
New York lawmakers have scheduled a hearing to discuss the medical potential of psilocybin as the state considers pursuing a pathway for regulated access to the main psychedelic component of “magic mushrooms.”
In a notice published by the Assembly Health Committee on Wednesday, Chairwoman Amy Paulin (D) noted that, while psilocybin is currently listed as a Schedule I drug, the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has designated it as a “breakthrough therapy” for major depression—indicating that “the therapy may offer improved results for such conditions over currently approved treatments.”
A meeting to go over the science and potential regulations of the novel therapy is scheduled for September 30. Oral testimony is by invite only from the committee, and witnesses have not yet been announced.
“Various localities have enacted measures regarding psilocybin, including the states of Colorado, Oregon, and New Mexico which allow for its supervised use, citing its potential as a treatment for some mental health conditions,” the notice says. “However, more information is needed to better understand the medicinal value that psilocybin may have as a therapy in New York State.”
“To this end, the Committee seeks to hear from researchers, medical experts, and other stakeholders on the potential medicinal value and risks of psilocybin,” Paulin said.
The chairwoman introduced a bill to legalize psilocybin for adults last year, provided they obtain a permit after undergoing a health screening and educational course.
New York legislators have taken special interest in psychedelics reform in recent sessions.
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For example, in January, Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal (D) filed legislation calling for the legalization of certain entheogenic substances such as psilocybin and ibogaine for adults 21 and older.
The bill would amend state statute to make legal the “possession, use, cultivation, production, creation, analysis, gifting, exchange, or sharing by or between natural persons of twenty-one years of age or older of a natural plant or fungus-based hallucinogen.”
DMT, ibogaine, mescaline, psilocybin and psilocyn would fall under the definition of “natural plant or fungus-based hallucinogens” that would be legalized by the bill.
Rosenthal’s measure was introduced just days after another New York lawmaker, Sen. Nathalia Fernandez (D), prefiled a measure that would legalize psilocybin therapy for patients with qualifying conditions.
Under that proposal, people could receive psilocybin treatment from a certified facilitator in a clinical setting, or at their home if they’re unable to travel. Patients and facilitators would receive protections against state-level prosecution.
Fernandez also filed an earlier version of the bill last session, but it did not move out of committee either. Only minor technical changes have been made in the latest iteration.
Bicameral New York lawmakers said at a briefing last year that there was a “real chance” that legislation to legalize psilocybin-assisted therapy would advance through committee, emphasizing that delaying action would “neglect” many “people who need help” with certain mental health conditions. That did not ultimately materialize, however.
“We’re in a mental health crisis, and so we need every tool that’s available to us,” Assemblymember Pat Burke (D), who sponsored another bill to create a psilocybin therapy pilot program for 10,000 people, said. He added that “we’re here to turn the page” on the broader drug war.
Photo courtesy of Dick Culbert.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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Curaleaf Opens Cannabis Dispensaries in Florida, Ohio

Published
2 hours agoon
September 15, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – STAMFORD, Conn., Sept. 15, 2025 – Curaleaf Holdings Inc., a leading international provider of consumer cannabis products, announced the opening of two new dispensaries: Curaleaf Apopka, located at 1809 E. Semoran Blvd., Apopka, Fla., 32703, and Curaleaf Girard, located at 801 N State St., Girard, Ohio, 44420. With these dual openings, Curaleaf expands to 69 retail locations in Florida, five in Ohio and 157 nationwide.
Curaleaf Apopka strengthens the company’s presence in Central Florida, providing convenient access for registered medical cannabis patients across the Greater Orlando region. Curaleaf Apopka offers a wide portfolio of medical cannabis products, including Curaleaf’s Select brand vapes and edibles, Florida-exclusive Reef flower, Grassroots Dark Heart Collection flower, Anthem pre-rolls, Miss Grass pre-rolls and more. To ensure patient satisfaction, Curaleaf Florida is offering a 72-hour Flower Satisfaction Guarantee on select premium eighths from Grassroots and Reef. The store will operate from 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays.
Meanwhile, Curaleaf Girard marks the company’s first dispensary within the city of Girard, and enhances access for both medical patients and adult-use consumers across Ohio’s Northeast region. The store features a selection including Select BRIQ all-in-one vapes, Grassroots Dark Heart Collection flower, Grassroots pre-rolls, JAMS and Select XBites edibles and Find flower. Curaleaf will be introducing Grassroots and Find pre-rolls in Singles and 5-pack Shorties, as state regulations now allow for the sale of pre-rolls. Curaleaf Girard will be open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sundays.
“Each new store opening reflects our mission to expand safe, convenient access to high-quality cannabis across the country,” Curaleaf Chairman and CEO Boris Jordan said. “With Apopka, we are deepening our roots in Florida by serving an important new region for medical patients, and with Girard, we are proudly delivering the first licensed dispensary to the city. Together, these milestones show our commitment to patients and consumers who rely on cannabis for their well-being, while reinforcing Curaleaf’s leadership in both established and emerging markets.”
Local celebrations will mark the openings:
- Curaleaf Apopka will host a grand opening on Sept. 19, 2025, from noon to 5 p.m., featuring special promotions, giveaways and an interactive “Live Lounge” livestream with Curaleaf cultivation leaders.
- Curaleaf Girard will celebrate its opening with a ribbon-cutting ceremony alongside the Girard Chamber of Commerce at a later date, featuring exclusive promotions and complimentary refreshments.
For more information on Curaleaf’s dispensaries, products and patient resources, visit www.curaleaf.com.

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