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Medical Cannabis Research Facility Approved: #MSLeg Roundup

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Mississippi could soon have a medical cannabis research program at the University of Mississippi’s National Center for Cannabis Research and Education under a bill that earned approval in both chambers of the Legislature last month.

Senate Bill 2888 would create the Mississippi Medical Cannabis Research Program and allow the use of state, federal and private funds to pay for the research “related to the efficacy and potential health effects of various cannabis delivery methods, including vaporizing, ingesting, topical application and combustion,” the bill says.

Through various methods, scientists would study how medical cannabis can treat the medical conditions of patients who volunteer to participate in the program. UM’s current center tests cannabis on both humans and animals, but S.B. 2888 does not call for animal testing in its program.

“This sets up a research facility that’ll actually be able to take up cohorts of patients with similar disease structures, try to identify what therapies they’ve been on, the effectiveness of those, so that eventually down the road we can set parameters for recommendations of cannabis for patients with certain illnesses,” Sen. Kevin Blackwell said on the Senate floor on March 14 when introducing the bill.

UM’s current research partially focuses on developing pharmaceutical products that contain cannabis and can treat patients. The center does not have much information about how smoking cannabis can affect a patient, so S.B. 2888 would help improve knowledge on its effects.

UM already grows its own cannabis to research at the center, but a licensed Mississippi medical-cannabis cultivation company would provide cannabis samples for the medical-cannabis researchers to test, the bill says.

The legislation would require researchers to share their conclusions with medical professionals, lawmakers and the public. The bill would also create the Medical Cannabis Research Advisory Board to monitor and help with the research and its funding.

The Senate passed S.B. 2888 on March 14 by a 43-9 vote, and the House approved it on March 29 with a 106-10 vote.

The bill heads to Gov. Tate Reeves’ desk where he can choose to sign it into law, veto it or allow it to become law on a calendar deadline without his signature. If he vetoed it, the Legislature could override him with a two-thirds majority in both chambers.

988 Crisis Lifeline on Driver’s Licenses

The Suicide and Crisis Lifeline’s 988 phone number and website could soon be printed on Mississippians’ identification cards, driver’s licenses and learner’s permits under Senate Bill 2408. Faculty and students’ identification cards at state institutions of higher learning would also include the Crisis Lifeline number.

“This is a mental-health bill. If somebody is dealing with suicide or anything like that they will have it on the back of their card to call or get on that website to get help,” Rep. Lance Varner, R-Florence, said on the House floor on March 28.

The Senate passed S.B. 2408 on March 7 by a 51-0 vote and the House approved an amended version of the bill on March 28 with a 120-0 vote. The House’s amended version changed minor details in the wording of the bill. It heads back to the Senate for consideration. If the Senate approves the amended bill, it will head to Gov. Tate Reeves’ desk.

The Senate’s Medicaid Expansion Proposal

The Senate passed its version of Medicaid expansion using a strike-all amendment that replaced the text of the House’s bill with the Senate’s own less generous bill on March 28. The Senate version would cover significantly fewer working people than the House bill but could cost the state more because the Legislature would give up around $700 million in federal funds.

The Senate bill would cover people making up to 100% of the federal poverty level ($15,060 annually for one person or $31,200 for a family of four), down from the House bill which would have covered people making up to 138% of the federal poverty level ($20,120 annually for an individual or $40,056 for a family of four). The federal government covers at least 90% of the cost

Kevin Blackwell with Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann looking at him
Mississippi Republican Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann (right), listens as Senate Medicaid Committee Chairman Sen. Kevin Blackwell, R-Southaven, explains the chamber’s Medicaid expansion bill, which covers fewer people than a Medicaid expansion bill the House passed in February 2024. Blackwell offered details as the Senate passed its version on Thursday, March 28, 2024. AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

Mississippi Senate Medicaid Committee Chairman Sen. Kevin Blackwell, R-Southaven, estimated that 80,000 Mississippians could qualify for Medicaid coverage under the Senate’s plan but suggested that only about 40,000 would actually enroll.

A person would have to work 120 hours a month in a job that does not provide health insurance to qualify for Medicaid coverage under the Senate’s plan, up from 80 hours in the House plan. Unlike the House plan, the Senate’s Medicaid expansion plan would require the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to approve the work requirements for it to become law. Blackwell said no one will be eligible for expanded Medicaid if the federal government does not approve the requirements; the Biden administration has long opposed work requirements for Medicaid.

The bill has a few exceptions to the work requirement, including for people who have physical and mental disabilities, full-time students, people enrolled in workforce training and caregivers for a child, spouse or parent.

The Senate passed its amended Medicaid expansion bill by 36-16 vote on March 28. The amended bill heads back to the House for consideration, but the two chambers will likely need to work out their differences in conference.

Gov. Reeves has vowed to veto any Medicaid expansion bill, but both chambers have passed their own versions of the bill by veto-proof majorities.





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Nebraska Republicans are targeting voter-approved medical marijuana, following other GOP-led states | Around Mississippi

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Nebraska Republicans are targeting voter-approved medical marijuana, following other GOP-led states

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LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska officials missed a deadline this week granting licenses to marijuana growers as part of a voter-approved measure that legalized medical marijuana, offering the latest example of pushback in Republican-led states against efforts to legalize the drug.

“How many times do we have to go down this road of fighting for our lives?” Lia Post asked through sobs Tuesday to the newly formed Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission as it became clear the body would not meet the Wednesday deadline.

Post lives in eastern Nebraska and suffers from a condition that causes chronic pain in her extremities. Marijuana provides relief from the condition and allows her to avoid addictive opiates.

“There’s no begging left in me,” Post cried during the commission meeting, where three members hand-picked by Republican Gov. Jim Pillen said they had to postpone licensing.

Nebraska Republican leaders from the governor to the state’s attorney general and conservative lawmakers are working to weaken or even kill the new law, despite its overwhelming support at the ballot box.

Twenty-four states and Washington, D.C., have legalized recreational marijuana for adults, although some efforts in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota recently failed at the ballot box. The medical use of marijuana is more accepted and allowed in 40 states and the District of Columbia, including 17 states where voters approved it.

But some Republicans in those states have continued to fight against medical marijuana approved by voters. In South Dakota, a Republican state lawmaker unsuccessfully pushed a bill this year to repeal voter-approved medical marijuana. In Idaho, lawmakers proposed a constitutional amendment that would forbid citizen initiatives to legalize marijuana and instead leave such decisions to the Legislature.

And in Mississippi, the effort to undo a 2020 voter-backed medical marijuana law seems to have gutted that state’s citizen initiative process after the Mississippi Supreme Court voided it, ruling the state’s initiative process is outdated.

Reasons for the pushback appear rooted in the belief that marijuana is a dangerous drug.

Law enforcement has long opposed it as a gateway to other drug use and as a driving-while-intoxicated hazard that can’t be measured in the field by a Breathalyzer. Many cite the federal government’s continued classification of marijuana as a dangerous drug on par with heroin and LSD.

Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies at the Marijuana Policy Project, said polling has shown a majority of Republicans support legalized medical marijuana.

“It’s like a small part of the Republican Party, but some of them are vehemently opposed,” O’Keefe said. “It’s people that bought into reefer madness.”

Unlike marijuana, O’Keefe noted thousands of Americans die annually from prescription opiates and adverse incidents from other drugs.

The medical marijuana law passed by Nebraska voters in November required that licenses be issued by Wednesday. The reason for the delay? Days earlier, Pillen forced the resignation of the two commission members he hadn’t appointed. They had been tasked with checking the qualifications of cultivator applications.

Pillen has insisted he is not opposed to medical marijuana, but has made several moves that critics say are designed to keep people from accessing it. That includes appointing members to the commission who have publicly opposed legalizing marijuana, even for medical use. Pillen also asked the commission to limit the number of marijuana plants to be licensed for medical use to 1,250 — a number the industry argued is too low to accommodate the number of state residents seeking prescription marijuana.

“The purpose in doing so was to ensure that an overabundance of plants would not saturate the market and lead to the creation of unregulated and potentially illegal sales,” Pillen spokesperson Laura Strimple said.

The new Nebraska commission has so far flouted provisions of the voter initiative — including passing emergency rules that ban smoking, vaping or marijuana edibles for medical use, which are specifically allowed under the law voters passed. The commission has also forbidden flavorings to improve the taste of bitter tinctures and pills that are allowed, has drastically limited the number of growers and dispensaries to be licensed, placed burdensome and expensive continuing education requirements on doctors and restricted the amount and strength of medical marijuana that can be prescribed.

State Attorney General Mike Hilgers has turned to the courts to try to invalidate the ballot initiative, approved by more than 70% of voters.

“I would say Nebraska is unique in the level of hostility of trying to overturn the will of the people,” said O’Keefe with the Marijuana Policy Project.

Hilgers lost a court battle last year in which he called into question the validity of thousands of signatures gathered to place the question on the November ballot. A former Republican state lawmaker also sued to void the new law, arguing that it violates federal prohibitions against marijuana. He lost that challenge in district court but has appealed to the state Supreme Court.

Hilgers said his legal fights are solely about protecting the rule of law, accusing the petition process of “unprecedented levels of fraud.” So far, the only success Hilgers has had in court is the misdemeanor conviction of a petition circulator accused of forging signatures on petitions.

“Someone cannot justify this wrongdoing by simply pointing to the favorable results on the ballot; if you could, it would create a dangerous precedent for future petition initiatives,” Hilgers said.

But Hilgers has made no secret of his opposition to even limited legalization of marijuana. In a March editorial, he said “marijuana is easily abused and is not safe to consume even under medical supervision.”

Crista Eggers, who led the medical marijuana ballot initiative, argued a “black market” thrives when marijuana for medical use is too severely restricted.

“If you are one of the 71% that voted in support of medical cannabis, you should be angry, because the system and the regulatory framework that is coming down from this commission is not at all what voters intended,” she said.

Paul Armentano, of the marijuana advocacy organization NORML, said elected officials in states dominated by one political party count on voter partisanship.

“I can only presume that lawmakers are emboldened to take these steps because, generally, they don’t fear there will be repercussions from the voters at the ballot box,” he said.



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Ocean Springs Alum Avery Weed wins third career Individual Title with Mississippi State Golf!

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Mississippi State’s Women’s Golf team wrapped up their third tournament of the fall earlier today in Arkansas at the Blessings Collegiate Invitational. After three days of play, the Ocean Springs native Avery Weed came out on top yet again!

After shooting 14 under par in the Blessings Collegiate Invitational, Avery Weed has won her third individual title with Mississippi State women’s golf! Her score of 14 under also marks the lowest 54- hole score in history of this invitational, with the previous record of 11 under.

This was also the first time that she shot in the 60’s all three rounds in her tournament career, making it a total of 17 rounds under 30 in her three seasons, tying the third most of any Bulldogs golfer during their career.

Weed continues to write her names in the record books and we could not be more proud of her.  Congratulations to ocean springs alum and now Mississippi State Junior, Avery Weed!





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