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Ohio House Passes Bill To Remove Voter-Approved Marijuana Legalization Protections And Restrict Hemp Market

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The Ohio House of Representatives has passed a bill that would make significant changes to the state’s voter-approved marijuana legalization law by removing several protections for consumers while also adding a series of new restrictions on hemp products that are intended to align the two sectors of the cannabis industry.

After moving through several House committees this week, with substantive amendments, the full chamber approved the legislation from Sen. Stephen Huffman (R) in a 87-8 vote on Wednesday.

While the measure previously passed the Senate in earlier form it will need to return to that chamber for concurrence, or go to a bicameral conference committee, before potentially heading to the governor’s desk.

Certain controversial provisions of the bill as passed by the Senate were scaled back by the House, but advocates are concerned that it would still make major changes to the marijuana law voters approved in 2023.

Rep. Brian Stewart (R), who has shepherded the legislation through the House, argued ahead of the floor vote that the legislation effectively reaches a “carefully crafted compromise” between lawmakers with differing perspectives on cannabis issues.

“This bill has been very difficult to wrangle, but most of our substantive bills usually are. Rather than being some kind of mushy muddle of weak sauce tie-breakers, this bill does what we all claim that we wanted to come to Columbus to do,” he said. “It tackles the issue head-on. It makes tough decisions. It respects and implements the feedback from residents and advocates across the affected industries. This bill wisely balances between Ohioans’ individual liberties, their safety, the financial wellbeing of our local communities and the need to protect the health and safety of Ohio’s children.”

Rep. Jamie Callender (R), who sponsored marijuana legalization legislation ahead of voters’ approval of the reform at the ballot, said the bill is “not perfect” but argued that lawmakers “have to act” to address intoxicating hemp and other pending issues.

“This is the revised code we’re writing,” he said. “I anticipate there will be numerous other bills on these topics in the near- and long-term future, as there should be… I’ll keep working with everyone to make it better.”

While its supporters have described it as a less heavy-handed approach compared to the original Senate bill, the measure would make substantive changes to the existing legalization law—with several provisions that advocates say directly contradict the will of voters and represent overreach on the part of lawmakers.

For example, the proposal would eliminate language in current statute providing anti-discrimination protections for people who lawfully use cannabis. That includes protections meant to prevent adverse actions in the context of child custody rights, the ability to qualify for organ transplants and professional licensing.

It would also recriminalize possessing marijuana from any source that isn’t a state-licensed dispensary in Ohio or from a legal homegrow. As such, people could be charged with a crime for carrying cannabis they bought at a legal retailer in neighboring Michigan.

Additionally, it would ban smoking cannabis at outdoor public locations such as bar patios—and it would allow landlords to prohibit vaping marijuana at rented homes. Violating that latter policy, even if it involves vaping in a person’s own backyard at a rental home, would constitute a misdemeanor offense.

Karen O’Keefe, director of states policies at the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), said in a letter to House lawmakers on Wednesday that SB 56 as currently drafted “eliminates essential protections from the voter-enacted law and recriminalizes innocuous conduct that voters legalized.”

“Please reject this erosion of freedoms enacted by voters,” she said.

Unlike the Senate-passed version of the bill, the House substitute will send tax revenue from cannabis sales to local governments.

The legislation as amended by the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday also adds new restrictions on the hemp market. With the exception of beverages, intoxicating hemp products would only be allowed to be sold in licensed hemp dispensaries.

Stores and breweries would be permitted to sell hemp-derived THC drinks, with new advertising restrictions meant to prevent appealing to youth. Products for on-site consumption would be limited to 5 mg of THC, but adults could buy take-home drinks containing up to 10 mg. More potent drinks could also be manufactured in Ohio, but only for sales to people outside the state.

There would also be a new $1.20 tax per gallon on hemp beverages created by the bill.

The measure was further amended earlier on Wednesday by the Finance Committee to clarify that people seeking to expunge prior misdemeanor marijuana possession offenses would not have to prove the specific amount of cannabis that they had. The change would also allow for the expungement of marijuana charges that were dismissed, and not just convictions.

The amendment additionally harmonizes cannabinoid beverage policy with existing laws relating to drinks and clarifies that penalties for selling marijuana, hemp drinks or cannabinoid products to an underage person would be the same regardless of the type of product.

The House vote on Wednesday comes weeks after the governor issued emergency rules prohibiting the sale of intoxicating hemp products for 90 days, with instructions to the legislature to consider permanent regulations. Last week, however, a county judge enjoined the state from enforcing that policy in response to a legal challenge.

“Frankly, the legislature had not taken action,” Gov. Mike DeWine (R) said in an interview published this week. “I’m still hopeful that the legislature will come in and actually take action.”

House Speaker Matt Huffman (R) commented recently on the relative lack of progress in advancing marijuana and hemp legislation since voters approved legalization at the ballot in 2023, noting substantive divides within the Republican caucus.

There are “folks who believe that marijuana should be legalized and regulated,” others “who believe that the hemp products should be on equal standing with everything that happened in the initiated statute and then “folks, like me, who are prohibitionists, who don’t think it should be legalized at all and it should be rare,” he said.

“I would say the prohibitionists have largely lost this discussion.”


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, last month, the Ohio Department of Cannabis Control (DCC) filed new proposed rules to build upon the state’s marijuana legalization law, laying out plans to update regulations on labeling and packaging requirements.

The proposal came weeks after Ohio medical and adult-use marijuana sales officially crossed $3 billion, data from the state Department of Commerce (DOC) shows.

The state sold about $703 million in recreational cannabis in the law’s first year of implementation, according to DCC data.

In March, a survey of 38 municipalities by the Ohio State University’s (OSU) Moritz College of Law found that local leaders were “unequivocally opposed” to earlier proposals that would have stripped the planned funding.

Meanwhile in Ohio, adults as of June are able to buy more than double the amount of marijuana than they were under previous limits, with state officials determining that the market can sustainably supply both medical cannabis patients and adult consumers.

The governor in March separately announced his desire to reallocate marijuana tax revenue to support police training, local jails and behavioral health services. He said funding police training was a top priority, even if that wasn’t included in what voters passed in 2023.

Ohio’s Senate president has also pushed back against criticism of the Senate bill, claiming the legislation does not disrespect the will of the electorate and would have little impact on products available in stores.

Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.

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Wisconsin Lawmakers Rally for Medical Cannabis Legalization in Committee Hearing

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Wisconsin state Sen. Patrick Testin watched his grandfather, Blair Testin, a “big guy,” waste away after undergoing a series of chemotherapy treatments for lung and bone cancer that robbed his appetite.

This was in the 1990s, when California was the lone state in the nation to legalize medical cannabis. Yet the Testin family made the difficult decision to go outside the law and provide the elder Testin an alternative to pharmaceutical medicine more than 25 years ago.

Testin has been sharing the story of his grandfather for more than six years now, but his most recent testimony came Oct. 22 before the Wisconsin Senate Committee on Health, as the Badger State’s cannabis laws remain among the most restrictive in the nation, with no medical program to provide legal access to patients in need.

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Testin gathered his emotions before retelling the story.

“It gave him his appetite back, and it gave him time that we probably otherwise would not have had,” Testin said Wednesday in Madison. “That story is not unique to mine. We have heard this from countless families all across the state, which is why I believe it’s time for us to enact a sensible medical cannabis program here in the state.”

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A Republican from Stevens Point, Testin is rallying to make Wisconsin the 41st state to legalize medical cannabis via the passage of Senate Bill 534, legislation he’s sponsoring alongside Senate President Mary Felzkowski, R-Tomahawk.

Rep. Patrick Snyder, R-Weston, is sponsoring the proposal in the lower chamber.

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The legislation intends to create an Office of Medical Cannabis Regulation to oversee a licensed marketplace and to establish and manage a patient and caregiver registry, allowing patients with qualifying conditions to access cannabis, including those with cancer, seizures or epilepsy, glaucoma, severe chronic pain, severe muscle spasms, severe chronic nausea, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, inflammatory bowel disease, and any terminal illness with a probable life expectancy of less than one year.

“Illness does not discriminate. It affects people from all walks of life,” Testin said. “There is no doubt that each and every one of us knows someone that has suffered through an illness and struggled to find ways to make it through each day. While there are often medications that doctors could prescribe to help combat these illnesses, many come with side effects that can make living a normal life much more difficult.”

Felzkowski, 62, who was 40 years old when she was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a double mastectomy, knows those side effects personally. Ten years later, she was diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer.

Like Testin, Felzkowski also gathered her emotions before sharing her testimony with committee members.

“During that treatment, I lived on opioids,” said Felzkowski, who used prescription drugs for nine months to help with her pain. “The side effects of opioids are something nobody should have to live through because you take drugs; you take the opioids to control the pain so you can function through the day. … I remember sobbing to my oncologist, saying, ‘I don’t want to be a drug addict.’ And he said, ‘Well, we’ll worry about that after you survive.’”

Today, 12 years later, Felzkowski’s oncologist tells her that legalizing medical cannabis would help a lot of people by providing another tool in the toolbox.

“Here we are sitting in our ivory tower denying that for people that really need it, and it’s wrong that we’re doing that,” she said. “[It’s] not a silver bullet, but for the people out there that need it, it is that silver bullet.”

Under S.B. 534, qualifying medical cannabis patients must have written confirmation from a health care prescriber that the prescriber established a bona fide relationship with the patient. Dispensaries would be required to employ pharmacists who consult with first-time patients or caregivers to recommend daily dosages and review a patient’s medical records under the state’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program.  

Home cultivation and smokable cannabis (flower, pre-rolls, etc.) would be prohibited under the legislation.

The Senate Health Committee also took testimonies from the public on Wednesday.

Nora Lowe, a 17-year-old with a rare genetic neurological disorder called Rett syndrome, was accompanied by her parents, Megan and Josh Lowe. Nora testified through a computer audio recording.

“It affects everything I try and do,” she said. “Just like any 17-year-old, my body just doesn’t want to cooperate.”

Nora first began advocating for patient access to medical cannabis when she was 10. Seven years later, she now questions why she’s still asking for medicine that 86% of Wisconsin voters think she should have access to, according to a February 2024 survey conducted by Marquette Law School pollsters.

“My friends with Rett syndrome who use medical cannabis actually sleep through the night and see extensive relief from painful muscle spasms. Why can’t I get relief from mine?” Nora asked lawmakers. “My friends who have access to cannabis see profound improvements in their therapies and communication skills. Why can’t I experience the same types of advancement of skills? My friends with Rett syndrome who use medical cannabis are able to regulate their movements and breathing patterns, so they are more engaged in social situations. I want that. I want my breath-holding episodes to stop. I believe that I deserve the same opportunities to improve my quality of life; don’t you?”

The 17-year-old said both Democrats and Republicans agree that people like her deserve medical cannabis.

“Yet we are still at the same place we were when I was 10 years old,” Nora said.

While Republicans who control both chambers of the Wisconsin Legislature agreed last year that they should legalize medical cannabis, party leaders disagreed on the right path forward.

In 2024, Assembly Speaker Rob Vos, R-Rochester, backed a plan that called for state-run dispensaries, but that plan didn’t sit well with Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu, R-Oostburg. The reform proposal died early in the session.

Snyder, the Assembly sponsor of S.B. 534, told the Senate Health Committee members on Wednesday that he’s going to twist the arm of Rep. Clint Moses, R-Menomonie, who chairs the Assembly Health Committee, to provide a hearing on the legislation.

“Let’s have it,” Snyder said. “Don’t listen to inside forces. Why are people so afraid?”

The intent is to advance language that can pass through both houses, Felzkowski said.

Testin said the legislation is up against political dynamics, both inside and outside the Legislature, that the sponsors have to navigate.

“Our hope is that this is a starting point in the conversation to get us to a point where we can get individuals comfortable with the concept, but more importantly, we have to start somewhere,” he said.



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Massachusetts Campaign To Roll Back Marijuana Legalization Law Is ‘On Track’ To Make 2026 Ballot, Spokesperson Says

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A Massachusetts campaign says it is “on track” to collect enough signatures to put an initiative on the 2026 ballot that would roll back key aspects of adult-use marijuana legalization in the state. Meanwhile, some in the cannabis reform community are raising concerns about alleged instances where voters are being approached by signature gatherers with misleading information before signing petitions.

About a month after Massachusetts Attorney General Joy Campbell (D) cleared the campaign for signature gathering by certifying the recriminalization proposal, spokesperson Wendy Wakeman said the process is “going well” as they work to collect 100,000 signatures by a December 3 deadline.

“It’s on track,” Wakeman told Cannabis Business Times, while acknowledging that the “whole process—the initiative petition process—isn’t easy.”

In order to potentially qualify for the ballot, the campaign will need to submit an initial batch of 74,574 valid signatures. Internally, prohibitionist advocates have determined that they need to collect around 100,000 “because there are two different vetting processes that the signature sheets, the petitions, will go through,” and so it’s important to have that cushion for those that are potentially invalidated.

“The process at every step is political,” Wakeman said, arguing that while the voters decisively approved legalization at the ballot in 2016, there’s a sizable population of health professionals, parents and educators who are angling for a reversal of the law.

More people are feeling the “impact that the growth of marijuana use has had on the quality of life, the increase in DUI stops, the increase in child poisonings and in pet poisonings,” she said. “There’s a group that coalesces around the idea that we moved too far too fast with marijuana legalization, and that it’s not working well for Massachusetts.”

When the attorney general’s office completed its review of about 50 proposed 2026 ballot measures, it certified two versions the recriminalization campaign submitted.

Both would eliminate the state’s commercial adult-use market while maintaining patient access under the medical cannabis program and continuing to allow lawful possession of up to an ounce of recreational marijuana. “Version A” contains language that would also cap THC content for medical marijuana, while “Version B” omits that policy.

Wakeman says the campaign is pursuing the latter initiative without the cap. “We’re focusing on a petition that rolls back recreational pot stores and the legality of home-grown recreational marijuana,” she said.

Under initiative—titled “An Act to Restore A Sensible Marijuana Policy”—adults 21 and older could still possess up to an ounce of cannabis, only five grams of which could be a marijuana concentrate product.

Possession of more than one ounce but less than two ounces would be effectively decriminalized, with violators subject to a $100 fine. Adults could also continue to gift cannabis between each other without remuneration.

But provisions in the state’s voter-approved marijuana law that allow for commercial cannabis retailers and access to regulated products by adults would be repealed under the proposal.

Adults’ right to cultivate cannabis at home would also be repealed.

Meg Sanders, CEO of the Massachusetts-based Canna Provisions, told Cannabis Business Times that the question of legalization in the commonwealth has already been answered.

“I believe the voters showed up in 2016 and stated exactly what they wanted to see, which was a regulated cannabis market for adults,” she said. “I really hope we don’t have to ask and answer it again.”

“I think prohibition in any form is a real threat, and I think we have to keep our eye on the ball and not assume and not just go about our merry way. We’ll talk about it with our customers. We’ll make sure that they’re very aware of it. Please ask them to tell their friends. I just feel like we don’t know what the money behind this initiative is. We don’t understand exactly what’s backing this, but in my opinion, any threat to freedom is a threat that we need to look at.”

On Tuesday, the editor in chief of the Massachusetts-based marijuana news site Talking Joints Memo shared that a friend of his was recently approached by a person allegedly collecting signatures for the campaign who he said significantly mischaracterized the proposal by suggesting it would “stop criminalizing weed once and for all.”

Others in the industry replied to the LinkedIn post with similar experiences. But for what it’s worth, one person also flagged that they’ve heard of recent instances where petitioners have been collecting signatures for a ballot measure that isn’t actually certified.

Marijuana Moment reached out to the campaign for comment, but a representative was not immediately available.

Meanwhile, the head of Massachusetts’s marijuana regulatory agency recently suggested that the measure to effectively recriminalize recreational cannabis sales could imperil tax revenue that’s being used to support substance misuse treatment efforts and other public programs.

If enough of the initial signature submissions are validated, the proposal will then go before the legislature, with lawmakers having until May 6 to enact it into law or propose a substitute. If they do not, organizers will then need to collect 12,429 additional valid voter signatures to put the measure on the ballot.

Whether the cannabis measures make the cut is yet to be seen. Voters approved legalization at the ballot in 2016, with sales launching two years later. And the past decade has seen the market evolve and expand. As of August, Massachusetts officials reported more than $8 billion in adult-use marijuana sales.


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.

Regulators are also working to finalize rules to allow for a new cannabis consumption lounge license type, which they hope to complete by October.

Separately, in May CCC launched an online platform aimed at helping people find jobs, workplace training and networking opportunities in the state’s legal cannabis industry.

The legislature’s Joint Committee on Cannabis Policy in August approved bills to provide employment protections for marijuana consumers and expand the state’s medical cannabis program, in part by adding post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and opioid use disorder to the list of qualifying conditions.

State lawmakers have also been considering setting tighter restrictions on intoxicating hemp-derived products and a plan to allow individual entities to control a larger number of cannabis establishments.

Also in Massachusetts, legislators who were working on a state budget butted heads with CCC officials, who’ve said they can’t make critical technology improvements without more money from the legislature.

Meanwhile, Massachusetts lawmakers recently approved a bill to establish a pilot program for the regulated therapeutic use of psychedelics. And two committees have separately held hearings to discuss additional psilocybin-related measures.

Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.

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Village Farms Introduces Industry-First, One-Way Aroma Valve in Cannabis Packaging

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[PRESS RELEASE] – DELTA, British Columbia, Oct. 22, 2025 – Village Farms International Inc. announced another Canadian first innovation from its Pure Sunfarms brand: the launch of a one-way aroma valve built directly into its dried flower packaging.

The one-way aroma valve is pressure-activated and designed to release the flower’s scent only when gently squeezed, while preventing air, moisture and contaminants from entering the bag. The innovation allows consumers to experience the natural aroma of the flower, without opening the package or compromising product integrity. Adapted from proven technology long used in premium coffee packaging, it represents the next evolution in cannabis packaging, bringing a sensory dimension never before available in the legal market.

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“Smell is powerful – it connects us instantly to how we feel, shaping our choices in ways we don’t even think about,” said Orville Bovenschen, president, Village Farms Canadian Cannabis. “First, we gave people a window so they could see the flower. Now, we’ve added a valve so they can smell it. It might seem like a small thing, but in cannabis, it’s huge. Because it’s more than just aroma: It’s increased accessibility, as well as memory, emotion and experience all at once. These details matter because they bring everyone back to that first time we smelled and smoked great flower; that moment that stays with you. With this innovation, we’re proud to do that for all consumers.”

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Following the success of the Pure Sunfarms brand’s window packaging, the aroma valve continues the Village Farms Canadian Cannabis mission to make cannabis shopping more accessible, informative and barrier-free for everyone. By giving consumers a way to preview aroma at the point of purchase, the company is helping people choose strains that match their preferences, using the same senses that guided cannabis selection long before legalization.

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New pouches featuring Pure Sunfarms’ proprietary aroma-valve design will roll out across Canada as fresh inventory reaches stores through October, beginning with Pure Sunfarms ounces and later expanding to other top-selling SKUs.



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