Connect with us

Alabama

Alabama cannabis regulators slash business fees by a quarter

Published

on



The Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission last week decided to roll back “most cannabis business license fees by 25%,” potentially providing some financial relief to business owners who have been waiting months for the market to launch as legal battles over some permits have continued in court.

The commission voted on Thursday to approve the fee cut, which will apply only to processors, growers, transporters and testing labs, but not to retailers, 1819 News reported. Fees for those companies range from $30,000 to $40,000, and the reduction is a one-time-only benefit for businesses that were licensed a year ago, a spokesperson for the agency emphasized.

The fee reduction was approved after an earlier attempt at reducing fees by 66% failed, 1819 News reported. With the move, the commission is sacrificing $147,500 in income from fees.

One of the licensed growers, owner John Reeves of CRC of Alabama, said during a November AMCC meeting that permitholders needed such a break precisely because of the stalled market launch, which has meant that companies like his have been burning through capital while unable to begin operations, let alone bring in revenue.

“We’re operating and have absolutely nothing coming in,” Reeves said at the time, 1819 News reported.

“A lot of us, including CRC was prepared to work at a loss for several years if we needed to, but we did not prepare to work at a total loss,” Reeves said. “It costs a lot of money to run a cannabis cultivation plant. There are irrigation systems to put in, a complete revamping of your facilities, there’s just so much that goes into it not to mention the labor.”

The AMCC has struggled for years to finalize the winners of the “integrated” medical marijuana permits, and one lawsuit over the licensing process is slated for a court hearing on Jan. 13.

The last time the AMCC revisited licensing was December 2023, when it chose – for the third time – winners of the integrated permits. Since then, however, litigation has essentially paused the medical cannabis market rollout, and it’s not clear when the state may be able to move forward, despite the appointment of a mediator in October to hopefully get the matter resolved. The situation even prompted calls from some state lawmakers earlier this year to redo the licensing process altogether, though that push was a non-starter.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Alabama

Southern lawmakers float tighter controls on consumable hemp

Published

on



State lawmakers across the U.S. are grappling with how to regulate the booming market for psychoactive hemp products, and a pair of the South’s biggest economies recently tried to take steps to rein in the industry.

In Alabama, lawmakers moved forward with efforts to impose stricter regulations on products like delta-8 THC despite industry pushback, while a similar attempt in Georgia stalled, according to recent reports from state news outlets.

Alabama

Alabama State Rep. Andy Whitt, a Republican out of Harvest, recently filed House Bill 445 in Alabama, which would impose regulations on all consumable hemp products similar to those on alcohol, the Alabama Daily News reported.

“In 2023, the Alabama Poison Information Center investigated 235 cases involving delta-8, and more than 40% of calls were for children six and under,” Whitt wrote in a recent op-ed for the Alabama Daily News.

HB445 sets up licensing requirements across the consumable hemp vertical, with annual fees ranging from $1,000 for retailers to $5,000 for manufacturers and wholesalers.

The bill also imposes product standards limiting THC content to 5 milligrams per serving for beverages and edibles, and 0.3% total THC on a dry weight basis for other products. Additionally, it requires child-resistant packaging and detailed labeling that includes warnings about potential intoxicating effects, as well as age-gate individuals 21 and older and establishing a 7% excise tax on gross sales, with proceeds split between the state’s coffers, counties and municipalities.

Republican Sen. Tim Melson, from Florence, tried for an even stricter approach earlier this year, filing a bill that would have outright banned all psychoactive cannabinoid products in Alabama by classifying them as Schedule I controlled substances. After that effort failed to gain traction, Melson filed Senate Bill 237, which, similar to Whitt’s proposal, would have regulated these products like alcohol, according to the outlet.

The bill failed in a Senate committee in a tied 4-4 vote, with industry representatives speaking out against the measure.

“It puts hemp under ABC which oversees liquor, not agricultural products,” said Molly Cole with the Alabama Hemp & Vape Association at a public hearing. “This move not only burdens an already-stretched agency, but it also risks penalizing and criminalizing hemp products more harshly than alcohol and tobacco.”

Melson defended his proposal despite the resistance.

“If I had an unregulated product that I was able to take to the market and charge what I want for it, I probably wouldn’t want it regulated either,” Melson told Alabama Daily News. “I’m just trying to get it under control. I keep getting calls from people having children show up in the ER for taking something they’re not even supposed to be allowed to buy.”

Melson told the Alabama Daily News on Thursday that the bill was “not dead yet,” with Whitt’s HB445 set to be heard in the House Committee on Health at an as-of-yet undetermined date.

Georgia

Meanwhile, in neighboring Georgia, a similar effort to ban intoxicating hemp products stalled, giving businesses a reprieve for at least another year, according to HempToday.

Senate Bill 254, sponsored by Republican Sen. Bill Cowsert, which sought to ban any hemp-derived products containing THC, passed the Georgia Senate in early March with a 42-14 vote but saw strong pushback in the House Regulated Industries Committee, chaired by Republican Rep. Alan Powell.

“We are putting loaded guns in people’s hands in the form of a can or a gummy, and we need to protect them,” Cowsert warned during debates over the bill, the outlet reported.

However, Powell’s committee ultimately rejected Cowsert’s restrictions, opting instead for a different version that peeled away all proposed limitations on the hemp industry and proposed expanding the sale of hemp products to state-licensed package stores, HempToday reported.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading

Alabama

Alabama lawmaker moves to strip cannabis commission’s licensing power

Published

on



An Alabama lawmaker introduced legislation that would strip some medical marijuana licensing authority from a state commission and transfer it to a private consultant. The move follows years of delays and legal challenges that have prevented patients from accessing cannabis products.

State Sen. Tim Melson, a Republican out of Florence who co-sponsored the original 2021 medical marijuana law, filed Senate Bill 72 this week to address what he describes as a frustrating deadlock in implementing the program.

“It’s just taking too long,” Melson told Alabama Daily News regarding the awarding of integrated facility licenses needed to give patients access to medical marijuana products. “You had one job, you haven’t been able to perform it, so let’s just go ahead and find somebody who can.”

The bill would require the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission to hire a “nationally recognized entity with expertise in financial auditing and managerial consulting” with offices in at least 15 states by October, according to draft legislation. The consultant would then be tasked with awarding licenses from the original pool of applicants who submitted paperwork by Dec. 31, 2022.

The proposal would also expand the number of integrated facility licenses from five to seven, citing population growth since the 2021 law was enacted. Those licenses permit both cultivation and the sale of medical marijuana products.

Industry sources expressed skepticism about portions of the bill, particularly provisions that would make Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission license denials “final and conclusive” and expedite appeals directly to the state Supreme Court, according to WBRC-TV. Multiple companies connected to the state’s cannabis industry also raised concerns about keeping the same individuals involved in overseeing the licensing process, the station reported.

John McMillan, director of the cannabis commission, said officials are reviewing the bill but indicated early support for measures that could break the current impasse.

“The commission is focused on getting licenses out, getting this program up and going and getting patients medication,” McMillan told Alabama Daily News. “There’s only two ways to do that right now, the courts or the Legislature, the way I see it.”

The licensing process, which began with applications in late 2022, has been mired in scoring inconsistencies, transparency concerns and litigation that continues to delay implementation. Previous attempts to restart the program, including legislation Melson filed last spring, failed to advance beyond committee.

While commission member Sam Blakemore recently suggested ongoing litigation could be resolved “in a matter of weeks,” Melson’s bill highlights growing legislative impatience with delays that have left qualifying patients without legal access to medical marijuana for more than two years after initial legalization.

The legislation would apply retroactively to multiple pending lawsuits in Montgomery Circuit Court, where a retired judge is currently mediating claims from license applicants who allege flaws and illegalities in the commission’s review process.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading

Alabama

The Daily Hit: December 17, 2024

Published

on



The Daily Hit is a recap of the top financial news stories for Tuesday, December 17, 2024.

On the Site

STIIIZY faces another suit over marketing to teens, psychosis claims

The new challenge adds to its laundry list of lawsuits as scrutiny mounts over youth targeting, illegal dispensaries.

Read more here.

Massachusetts regulators advance social cannabis consumption rules

The state’s Cannabis Control Commission is targeting mid-2025 to launch the program.

Read more here.

Alabama cannabis regulators slash business fees by a quarter

The one-time-only discount is only available to operators who were licensed a year ago.

Read more here.

Missouri sees slew of bills to regulate growing hemp market

Alcohol distributors and hemp companies are battling over THC limits and sales restrictions.

Read more here.

MediPharm Labs sells Ontario facility for C$5.5M as part of streamlining plan

Kensana wants to use the facility to develop an FDA-approved topical chronic wound treatment.

Read more here.

Charlie Fox opens largest northeast dispensary in Times Square

Charlie Fox is hoping to cater to tourists and commuters alike.

Read more here.

In Other News

Michigan

Michigan cannabis sales for November were higher than expected, according to data from the Cannabis Regulatory Agency. Total sales were $276.4 million, up 6.1% from a year earlier, and 2.9% from October. Medical marijuana sales were slightly less than $900,000.

Read more here.

Aurora Cannabis

Aurora Cannabis announced a distribution partnership between The Entourage Effect and MedReleaf Australia. The Entourage Effect provides comprehensive distribution and support services to pharmacies in Australia and will serve as a wholesaler for MedReleaf Australia’s portfolio of products under the CraftPlant, Aurora and IndiMed brands.

Read more here.

Numinus Wellness

Numinus Wellness closed its previously announced definitive agreement with Stella, an interventional psychiatry practice focused on treating PTSD, anxiety and depression with biological modalities, of the sale of the company’s five Wellness Clinics in Utah for $3.53 million.

Read more here.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading
featured59 minutes ago

The PFAS Threat in Cannabis and Hemp: What You Need to Know

featured2 hours ago

Chicago Police Can’t Search Vehicles Based on Smell of Raw Cannabis Under New Rules

featured3 hours ago

Marijuana Opponents ‘Have Lost’ The Debate, GOP Senator Says, Arguing ‘It’s Time’ To Regulate It Like Alcohol And Tobacco

video3 hours ago

How much do you know about Pennsylvania’s medical marijuana program? Take our quiz.

featured4 hours ago

Verano Unveils Bodega-Style Dispensary Experience at Zen Leaf Cave Creek in Phoenix

featured5 hours ago

Congress to vote on cannabis & psychedelics amendments this week (Newsletter: June 25, 2025)

video11 hours ago

Rockford teen intended to deliver 300+ grams of cannabis, police say

video12 hours ago

El Paso cannabis shops relieved after Gov. Abbott vetoes ban on THC products

video15 hours ago

More older adults are using cannabis, study says

video16 hours ago

Marijuana use rising among seniors, and doctors are sounding alarms

video18 hours ago

More older Americans are using marijuana, according to new data

featured19 hours ago

With Texas Hemp Ban Now Vetoed By Governor, Industry And Lawmakers Turn To Regulation

featured20 hours ago

House To Vote On Letting VA Doctors Recommend Medical Marijuana To Military Veterans And Supporting Psychedelics Research

featured21 hours ago

Montana Governor Rejects Bill To Let Tribes Negotiate Marijuana Regulations With State

video22 hours ago

Texas Lt. Gov. puzzled by veto of THC ban, says Gov. Abbott wants to legalize marijuana – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

202522 hours ago

What strains would these queer icons smoke?

featured22 hours ago

RFK Says Trump Administration Could Provide Psychedelic Therapy To Military Veterans ‘Within 12 Months’

video23 hours ago

Texas’s Dan Patrick vows to keep fighting against THC after Abbott vetoes ban

video1 day ago

Why more seniors are turning to cannabis

featured1 day ago

Top Cannabis Brand Rove Launches in Maryland With Award-Winning Vapes

video1 day ago

PHUKET XTRA: VIDEO: Medical cannabis law signed, Phuket’s noodle record, Corruption blamed for air crashes || June 24

featured1 day ago

Aurora Launches 2 High-Potency Flower Products in Poland

featured1 day ago

Pennsylvania Lawmakers Are ‘Getting Close’ On Marijuana Legalization Deal As Budget Deadline Looms, Key Senator Says

featured1 day ago

Tilray Medical Receives Italy’s 1st Authorization to Distribute Medical Cannabis Flower

California Cannabis Updates1 year ago

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

Breaking News1 year ago

Connecticut Appoints The US’s First Cannabis Ombudsperson – Yes there is a pun in there and I’m Sure Erin Kirk Is Going To Hear It More Than Once!

best list11 months ago

5 best CBD creams of 2024 by Leafly

Bay Smokes12 months ago

Free delta-9 gummies from Bay Smokes

cbd1 year ago

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

Business9 months ago

EU initiative begins bid to open access to psychedelic therapies

Mississippi Cannabis News1 year ago

Mississippi city official pleads guilty to selling fake CBD products

California1 year ago

May 2024 Leafly HighLight: Pink Runtz strain

Breaking News1 year ago

Curaleaf Start Process Of Getting Their Claws Into The UK’s National Health System – With Former MP (Resigned Today 30/5/24) As The Front Man

autoflower seeds9 months ago

5 best autoflower seed banks of 2024 by Leafly

Mississippi Cannabis News1 year ago

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

cannabis brands9 months ago

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

Breaking News1 year ago

Nevada CCB to Accept Applications for Cannabis Establishments in White Pine County – “Only one cultivation and one production license will be awarded in White Pine County”

Hemp1 year ago

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

Mississippi Cannabis News1 year ago

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

best list1 year ago

6 best CBD gummies of 2024 by Leafly

best list1 year ago

5 best THC drinks of 2024 by Leafly

Arkansas9 months ago

The Daily Hit: October 2, 2024

best list12 months ago

5 best delta-9 THC gummies of 2024 by Leafly

Mississippi Cannabis News1 year ago

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

Breaking News1 year ago

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

Asia Pacific & Australia1 year ago

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

Breaking News1 year ago

PRESS RELEASE : Justice Department Submits Proposed Regulation to Reschedule Marijuana

California Cannabis Updates1 year ago

Press Release: May 9, STIIIZY and Healing Urban Barrios hosted an Expungement Clinic & Second Chance Resource Fair

Trending