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Denton City Officials Repeal Voter-Approved Marijuana Depenalization Ordinance

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2 days agoon


Members of the Denton (population: 158,000) City Council have repealed a voter-initiated ordinance that sought to halt local police from making low-level marijuana possession arrests.
Last week, city officials voted 4 to 3 to repeal the law, which was approved in 2022 by more than 70 percent of municipal voters. Denton is among a number of Texas cities that are being sued by the state’s Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton, who argues that localities are forbidden from implementing policies that fail to “fully enforce laws related to drugs.” State law defines marijuana possession of two ounces or less as a criminal misdemeanor, punishable by up to 180 days in jail, a $2,000 fine, and a criminal record.
City officials had spent some $200,000 in legal fees responding to the lawsuit.
In recent months, officials in the Texas cities of Bastrop (population: 11,700), Lockhart (population: 15,300), and Harker Heights (population: 34,000) have each declined to adopt similar voter-approved ordinances out of fear of protracted litigation.
In March, a Texas appellate court issued a pair of rulings halting the implementation of voter-approved depenalization initiatives in the cities of Austin (population: 980,000) and San Marcos (population: 72,000).
In addition to the Attorney General’s legal efforts, Texas lawmakers are also moving forward with legislation to prohibit localities from placing any future marijuana-related measures on the ballot. Specifically, Senate lawmakers recently approved SB 1870, which forbids voters from deciding upon any local ordinances that seek to decriminalize marijuana. The measure also prohibits cities and towns from adopting policies that do not “fully enforce” the state’s criminal marijuana laws.
Texas is far from the only state where GOP lawmakers are pushing to strip away voters’ ability to weigh in on marijuana policies. Earlier this month, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation into law making it more difficult for entities to place ballot initiatives before Florida’s voters. Passage of the new law followed the narrow defeat of Amendment 3, which sought to regulate the adult-use cannabis market.
Also this year, Idaho lawmakers approved a resolution asking voters to provide legislators with the exclusive authority to amend state laws specific to the legalization or decriminalization of marijuana and other controlled substances. If enacted, no future initiatives pertaining to how marijuana or other controlled substances are regulated will be permitted to appear on the Idaho ballot.
And in Nebraska, Republican Attorney General Mike Hilgers is pursuing legal efforts to nullify a pair of voter-approved initiatives legalizing patients’ access to medical cannabis. Those measures passed with over 70 percent of the vote.
In response to these efforts, NORML’s Deputy Director Paul Armentano said: “In a healthy democracy, those with competing visions on public policy vie for voters’ support and abide by their voting decisions. However, it is becoming clear that those who oppose marijuana policy reform would rather take voters out of the equation altogether. Whether or not one personally supports or opposes cannabis legalization, these cynical and undemocratic tactics ought to be a cause of deep concern.”
NORML’s legislative alert opposing SB 1870 is available in NORML’s Take Action Center.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Sometimes you just want to cut loose and laugh – here are some suggestion for when you consume
Let’s be real—being high can turn even the most mundane activity into a full-blown adventure. Whether you’re sparking up alone or vibing with your crew, there’s something magical (and hilarious) about the way weed makes everything 10x funnier. If you’re looking for ways to lean into the giggles and good vibes, here are some tried-and-true stoner fun things to do after consuming marijuana which will make you belly laugh.
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Watch Weirdly Specific YouTube Videos
You haven’t lived until you’ve watched a 20-minute deep dive on why Shrek is secretly a cinematic masterpiece—or a guy restoring rusty knives in silence. The weirder and more niche, the better. Bonus points if you’re watching with friends and everyone has different commentary.
Play “High Charades”
Take classic charades, but add the confusion of being high. Someone inevitably ends up acting out a pineapple or accidentally miming their entire life story. It’s chaotic. It’s absurd. It’s comedy gold.
Cook Something You Definitely Shouldn’t Be Cooking
Think: grilled cheese with Doritos, marshmallows, and hot sauce. The high kitchen is a lawless place, where flavor profiles are made up and regrets come later. Just remember to document your “creations”—because your sober self won’t believe it.
Go on a Deep Dive into Random Wikipedia Pages
Start with “platypus,” end up at “the history of vending machines in Japan.” Reading while high becomes a journey through the most bizarre corners of human knowledge. You’ll be smarter? Maybe. Entertained? Definitely.
Try to Beat a Kids’ Puzzle Game
Bust out Connect 4, Jenga, or even those weird logic puzzles meant for ages 6–10. You’ll either feel like a genius or realize you’ve been staring at a Rubik’s cube for 45 minutes. Either way, it’s hilarious.
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Narrate Life Like a Nature Documentary
Turn your living room into a National Geographic special. Watch your roommate forage in the kitchen like a wild animal. Add a British accent. “Here, we observe the rare species known as ‘Chad’ in his natural habitat… the snack cabinet.”
Listen to a Song That’s Just… Strange
Find the weirdest song you can—something with yodeling or heavy theremin use. Then sit back, close your eyes, and let the confusion wash over you. It’s like going on an intergalactic voyage in your brain.
Being high isn’t just about chilling—it’s about laughing so hard your abs hurt and making memories that are somehow both chaotic and wholesome. Just remember: stay safe, stay hydrated, and never underestimate the comedic power of a banana

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
featured
Oregon Cannabis Companies No Longer Need Labor Peace Agreements to Renew Licenses

Published
2 hours agoon
May 30, 2025
Fifty-seven percent of Oregon voters believe cannabis retailers and processors should have labor peace agreements as a prerequisite for state licensure, but that public position is now moot.
The Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission (OLCC) announced May 29 that, effective immediately, it will no longer require cannabis companies to submit labor peace agreements to apply for or renew their licenses. The commission had adopted that requirement in December 2024, following the previous month’s passage of ballot Measure 119.
The United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 555 filed the ballot measure, in part, “due to ambiguity in federal law” that, according to the international labor union, has led to cannabis workers being denied rights, resulting in “unsafe workplaces, wage theft and other abuses.”
“Something that’s rampant in the industry is toxic chemicals, unchecked safety concerns and lack of proper PPE,” Local 555 spokesperson Miles Eshaia told the Oregon News Service in the leadup to November’s election. “Employers often cut corners. They compromise both worker and consumer safety, and you can avoid all that with a collectively bargained agreement and a collectively bargained safety agreement.”
The OLCC’s U-turn on no longer upholding voter-approved Measure 119 comes after U.S. District Court of Oregon Judge Michael H. Simon ruled on May 20 that the ballot measure is preempted by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and violates cannabis companies’ rights to freedom of speech.
“Given this ruling and in consultation with the Oregon Department of Justice, the OLCC will no longer require labor peace agreements as part of cannabis license applications and license renewals,” according to an OLCC news alert released on May 29.
Initially, it was unclear whether Oregon’s Justice Department would appeal Simon’s May 20 ruling.
Before getting overturned, Measure 119 had required cannabis business licensees or license applicants to “remain neutral” with respect to a bona fide labor organization’s representatives communicating with their employees, which Simon ruled was an abridgement of their First Amendment rights.
“Measure 119 is not limited to restricting only threatening, coercive, false, or misleading speech, but instead prohibits all speech by employers that is not ‘neutral’ toward unionization,” Simon wrote in his opinion and order. “Therefore, Measure 119 violates plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights to free speech.”
Cannabis retailer Ascend Dispensary and cannabis processor Bubble’s Hash, both licensed in Portland, Ore., filed the lawsuit in February, naming Gov. Tina Kotek, state Attorney General Dan Rayfield and a pair of OLCC officials as defendants.
The defendants, in part, argued that the NLRA might not apply to state-sanctioned cannabis businesses, which operate in a federally illegal marketplace under the Controlled Substances Act. This presented a “threshold question” in the case that Simon answered.
“The NLRA does not limit its jurisdiction to ‘lawful commerce’ or ‘legal substance,’ as some other federal laws do,” the judge wrote. “The NLRB has issued advisory memoranda dating back to 2013, in which it has stated that the medical marijuana industry is within the NLRB’s jurisdiction if the business meets the NLRA’s jurisdictional monetary requirements.”
With states like California, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York already requiring certain cannabis businesses to enter into labor peace agreements for licensure, a common assumption is that cannabis workers don’t have the right to organize under the National Labor Relations Act and therefore need state statutes.
Jeff Toppel, a partner at Bianchi & Brandt, told Cannabis Business Times in December 2023 that that assumption doesn’t hold.
“The premise of [Oregon’s] statute, and I think a lot of the other statutes that seek to require labor peace agreements, is this false premise that [cannabis workers are] not given the full gamut of federal law, of federal protections, because they’re in cannabis,” Toppel said.
One example is when the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled in December 2022 that Curaleaf acted unlawfully when the multistate operator refused to come to the bargaining table and recognize that its dispensary workers in Chicago voted to join the UFCW.
Toppel, who has argued countless union cases before the NLRB, said that forcing labor peace agreements through state statutes often leads to employers shopping around to get the best deals, which doesn’t always benefit the employees.
Although cannabis companies are no longer required to strike labor peace agreements in Oregon, nothing is stopping the state’s dispensary workers from organizing on their own.
Simon’s ruling in Oregon, however, collides with a March 2025 decision in the U.S. District Court of Southern California, where Judge Todd W. Robinson dismissed a challenge to California law that requires cannabis business applicants or licensees with 10 or more employees to enter into labor peace agreements.
That lawsuit was filed in April 2024 by Ctrl Alt Destroy LLC, which, according to the California Department of Cannabis Control’s (DCC) licensing database, does business as Embr, a dispensary in La Mesa, San Diego County.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta and DCC Director Nicole Elliott, as plaintiffs, argued that the court should not grant Ctrl Alt Destroy its requested relief because doing so would directly facilitate federally illegal conduct.
Robinson agreed, tossing Ctrl Alt Destroy’s challenge on the conclusion that the federal court could not lend its judicial power to a plaintiff “who seeks to invoke that power for the purpose of consummating a transaction in clear violation of [federal] law.”
In Oregon, a UFCW Local 555 spokesperson pointed out the conflicting federal rulings in a statement provided to KOIN 6 News.
“We now have conflicting federal rulings, with a judge in Oregon putting Measure 119 on hold while a California judge has upheld a similar law,” the spokesperson said. “One of these rulings is destined to be overturned on appeal. Our strong suspicion is that Judge Simon’s opinion, which flaunts Supreme Court precedent, will be the one reversed.”

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Colorado’s medicinal psilocybin program is set to launch soon after officials said they have licensed and inspected a testing facility, which was the last type of business required to properly run the program, Marijuana Moment reports.
The Colorado Department of Revenue’s Natural Medicine Division (NMD) said in an email Tuesday that officials are “excited to announce that the first licensed testing facility is fully certified by the Department of Public Health and Environment” (CDPHE).
Colorado voters approved the legalization of psychedelic mushrooms in 2022. Under the proposal, people aged 21 or older can grow and share psychedelic mushrooms, and the state is establishing regulated “healing centers” where people will soon be able to make appointments to consume psilocybin in a controlled environment.
In addition to the testing license, regulators have also approved five separate healing center licenses, three cultivation licenses, and two manufacturing licenses. Dozens more licenses are still pending.
“Now that the Colorado Department of Revenue has licensed cultivators, manufacturers, healing centers, and testing facilities, CDPHE has certified a testing facility, and the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies has licensed facilitators, natural medicine can start to be transferred from a cultivator or manufacturer to a lab for testing, then eventually to a healing center where a facilitator can oversee administration.” — CDPHE statement, via Marijuana Moment
The Colorado psychedelics program follows in the footsteps of Oregon, where voters approved a medicinal psilocybin program in late 2020, and the program launched in early 2023.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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