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Jones Soda Co. Sells Mary Jones THC Beverage Brand

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Seattle-based Jones Soda Co. has sold its hemp-based THC beverages brand Mary Jones to MJ Reg Disrupters for $3 million to “streamline operations and focus on its core soda offerings,” according to a press release.

Jones Soda unveiled its cannabis segment in 2022, launching Mary Jones first in California and then expanding the brand to other states. The company’s infused beverages contain hemp-derived delta-9 THC and cannabidiol (CBD).

MJ Reg Disrupters purchased Mary Jones with an initial June 19 cash payment of $489,399 plus an additional $2,510,610 via promissory notes over the next three years.

Jones Soda CEO Scott Harvey called the sale “an important milestone in our effort to focus our resources on areas where we see the strongest long-term growth and profitability.”

“We are proud of the innovation behind the Mary Jones brand, but I believe this divestiture enables us to sharpen our strategic priorities and accelerate investment in our core soda, functional beverage, and adult beverage categories.” — Harvey, in a statement

“We are excited about the opportunity to build on the Mary Jones legacy,” MJ Reg Director Joe Oblas said in the release. “Jones Soda created a unique and high-quality product, and we are committed to continuing its innovation and reach.”

 

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US House Committee Approves Bill to Close THCA ‘Loophole,’ Ban Intoxicating Hemp Products

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U.S. House Republicans advanced what many view as a hemp-killing provision in a must-pass appropriations bill for fiscal year 2026.

The House Appropriations Committee voted along party lines, 35-27, on June 23 to approve the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill. The 138-page spending bill includes more than $25 billion in discretionary allocations to address myriad issues facing U.S. farmers, ranchers and rural communities.

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In addition to focusing on America’s food and drug supply, this year’s bill also includes language to rewrite the rules around hemp-derived cannabinoid products. The provision aims to address what elected officials and law enforcement groups nationwide have increasingly viewed as a public health and safety concern in the aftermath of the 2018 Farm Bill’s federal legalization of industrial hemp cultivation. The 2018 Farm Bill regulates hemp as an agricultural commodity but not finished goods containing the plant’s derivatives.

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Under the Appropriation Committee’s fiscal 2026 legislation, hemp-derived cannabinoid products containing synthetic compounds and/or quantifiable amounts of THC or THCA—or other cannabinoids that have similar effects on humans or animals—would be illegal.

When the legislation first advanced through the House Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), on June 5, Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., said he was hoping to close the “hemp loophole” in the 2018 Farm Bill that has resulted in the proliferation of intoxicating cannabinoid products, such as those that contain delta-8 THC.

Harris, who chairs the subcommittee, provided similar opening remarks for the full committee markup that followed.

“As many states have stepped in to curb these dangerous products from reaching consumers, particularly children, it’s time for Congress to act to close this loophole while protecting the industrial hemp industry,” Harris said. “Reports that the included language would destroy legitimate businesses are simply not true—and that is clear to anyone closely reading the carefully drafted language that threaded the needle.”

The U.S. Hemp Roundtable accused Harris earlier this month of “reviving his crusade” to “quietly” dismantle the hemp industry by burying language on page 113 of the proposed spending bill that would redefine hemp in a way that would “ban the vast majority of safe, legal hemp-derived products sold nationwide.”

The industry advocacy organization contended that the bill’s inclusion of language to prohibit products with “quantifiable amounts” of THC or THCA would also effectively ban most nonintoxicating CBD products.

Renée Johnson, a specialist in agricultural policy with the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service (CRS), authored a June 13 report on the appropriations bill that backed that claim, writing that “excluding hemp-derived cannabinoid products from the federal definition of hemp effectively would prohibit production and sale of hemp-derived cannabinoids, derivatives, and extracts thereof, including cannabidiol (CBD).”

However, an updated version of Johnson’s CRS report was published on June 20 to exclude any mention of CBD.

Manufacturing hemp products with a purified CBD isolate that filters out even trace amounts of THC is a much more expensive process: Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp can contain up to 0.3% delta-9 THC on a dry-weight basis during a pre-harvest field test. But eliminating that potency threshold would change the compliance rules on finished goods.

The House Appropriations Committee approved a manager’s amendment (from Harris) on June 11, clarifying that in “determining the quantifiable amounts, the committee does not intend for industrial or nonintoxicating, hemp-derived cannabinoid products with trace or insignificant amounts of THC to be affected.”

The legislation authorizes the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services to determine what qualifies as “quantifiable amounts” of THC or other cannabinoids. In addition, industrial hemp grown for fiber, grain or other non-cannabinoid purposes would be defined separately.

While thousands of U.S. businesses have become dependent on manufacturing, distributing and selling consumable products containing intoxicating hemp derivatives, not all industry associations necessarily disagree with the intent of the appropriations bill.

The American Trade Association of Cannabis and Hemp (ATACH) stands on the principle that intoxicating products should be regulated when available for consumers to improve public safety and promote growth for the cannabis industry.

“The 2018 Farm Bill set the stage for the proliferation of synthetic THC products,” ATACH President Michael Bronstein said in a June 23 statement provided to Cannabis Business Times. “Today’s action by the House Appropriations Committee is an important first step toward addressing the risks posed by synthetic THC products, creating clear regulatory lanes for hemp-derived products, and resolving legal loopholes.

“Congress must confront the dangers of chemically converted synthetic THC products, safeguard CBD, and create parity across natural THC products regardless of origin. We look forward to continuing to work with Congress to create a unified federal framework for all natural THC products.”

Harris also included similar hemp language in his subcommittee’s draft of the fiscal 2025 agriculture/FDA spending bill, but it was later removed from last year’s appropriations package.

This year’s rendition is now being prepared to arrive on the House floor.



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House Votes To Let VA Doctors Recommend Medical Marijuana To Military Veterans And To Support Psychedelics Research

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The U.S. House of Representatives has approved amendments to a spending bill that would authorize U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) doctors to issue medical marijuana recommendations to military veterans and support psychedelics research and access.

Two days after the House Rules Committee made the cannabis and psychedelics amendments in order for floor consideration, the full chamber agreed to attach them to the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies (MilConVA) appropriations legislation on Wednesday.

One of the accepted proposals from Reps. Brian Mast (R-FL) and Dave Joyce (R-OH)—who are both co-chairs of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus—would increase veterans’ access to state medical marijuana programs and eliminate a current VA directive barring the department’s doctors from issuing cannabis recommendations.

Here’s the text of the amendment: 

“None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the Department of Veterans Affairs in this Act may be used to enforce Veterans Health Directive 1315 as it relates to—

(1) the policy stating that ‘VHA providers are prohibited from completing forms or registering Veterans for participation in a State-approved marijuana program’;

(2) the directive for the ‘Deputy Under Secretary for Health for Operations and Management’ to ensure that ‘medical facility Directors are aware that it is VHA policy for providers to assess Veteran use of marijuana but providers are prohibited from recommending, making referrals to or completing paperwork for Veteran participation in State marijuana programs’; and

(3) the directive for the ‘VA Medical Facility Director’ to ensure that ‘VA facility staff are aware of the following’ ‘[t]he prohibition recommending, making referrals to or completing forms and registering Veterans for participation in State-approved marijuana programs’.”

The provision—which passed on a voice vote—is based on a standalone bill, the Veterans Equal Access Act, which Mast refiled in February. That marked one of the latest attempt to enact the measure that’s enjoyed bipartisan support over recent sessions but has yet to become law. It’s advanced several times in committee and on the floor but has yet to be enacted into law.

After sharing his own experience with conventional medications following a serious injury during his time in military service, Mast said that, “in many cases” those drugs “leave our veterans in are, at the most extreme end of it, states of suicide. At other ends of it, just extreme states of dissatisfaction and lacking purpose in life. And in some cases, it does leave them in a better condition.”

“Veterans need to have options outside of these narcotics, and in many states, there are legal cannabis medical programs, and they need to have the ability when they’re being seen by their primary care physician inside of the VA to have discussions about whether cannabis is or is not right for them because they have access to it in their state,” Mast said.

In past years, both the House and Senate have included provisions in their respective MilConVA measures that would permit VA doctors to make the medical cannabis recommendations, but they have never been enacted into law.

Another MilConVA provision attached to the House bill this year, from Reps. Lou Correa (D-CA) and Jack Bergman (R-MI), would encourage VA to support research into the benefits of psychedelics in treating medical conditions commonly affecting military veterans.

Here’s the summary of the amendment: 

“Increases and decreases funding for the Medical and Prosthetic Research account at the Department of Veterans Affairs to direct the Department to evaluate and make recommendations on changes that would need to be made to its existing healthcare infrastructure to integrate approved psychedelic therapies into veterans’ care options for conditions such as PTSD and substance use disorders. This would include the need for supporting the development and dissemination of training and supervision programs for providers and pilot programs to inform clinical implementation of these therapies.”

The House approved the psychedelics measure on a voice vote.

Correa said on the floor that he and Bergman are “encouraged by the promising results so far that we have seen in treating veterans with PTSD and other disorders” by utilizing psychedelics.

“However, these therapies are different from traditional therapies in many ways,” the congressman said. “Psychedelic therapies involve long-hour sessions with multiple therapists, additional safety issues and special training consideration for providers. We introduce this amendment because we need to be ready and be proactive to make sure that when the VA is ready to administer these therapies, they actually can.”

Bergman said that “Washington, D.C. has built its success on good partnerships, especially across the aisle, on issues that benefit all of our Americans, not just a few,” and that’s what the amendment accomplishes.

“Without a plan to turn findings into frontline care, we risk failing the very people this research is meant to help our veterans,” he said. “We know the stakes. Too many service members come home bearing invisible wounds. While traditional treatments work for some, far too many are left cycling through ineffective medications, suffering in silence or worse.”

“This amendment sends a clear message to the VA: Don’t just study, prepare,” Bergman said. “We owe our veterans more than research we owe them results. We owe them implementation, and this amendment moves us one step closer to delivering that.”

There were notably fewer cannabis-related amendments filed for the MilConVA bill this year compared to past sessions, though the Rules Committee has previously rejected several of those other Democratic-led reforms such as blocking cannabis testing for federal job applicants in states that have enacted legalization.


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.

Meanwhile, on Monday, the House Appropriations Committee approved a separate spending bill containing provisions that hemp stakeholders say would devastate the industry, prohibiting most consumable cannabinoid products that were federally legalized during the first Trump administration.

Also, earlier this month, Congress passed a bill that is primarily focused on permanently banning analogues of fentanyl, though it also contains provisions that one GOP lawmaker said would remove barriers to conducting research into the risks and benefits of marijuana and other Schedule I drugs.

Congressional Committee Approves Federal Hemp THC Ban That Stakeholders Say Would Decimate Industry

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World-Class Growing Solutions | Cannabis Business Times

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Hydrofarm provides a portfolio of brands to support indoor cultivators of all sizes. The company’s offerings range from racking to lighting, nutrients and grow media, as well as a wide range of cultivation supplies. 

Hydrofarm’s variety of brands include:

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