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Texas Governor Plans to Call 2nd Executive Session for Unfinished Business, Including Hemp

Published
2 days agoon

Texas hemp THC businesses hoping to dodge a bullet thanks to House Democrats packing their bags and leaving town had better not hold their breath.
Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said Aug. 12 that should the Texas Legislature sine die (or adjourn) this Friday from a special session due to House Democrats breaking quorum in an attempt to derail his redistricting plan, he’ll just call another special session with the same agenda.
That agenda also includes the governor’s call to regulate consumable hemp products containing THC or other intoxicating cannabinoids; however, Texas lawmakers continue to push a much more prohibitive proposal to ban those products entirely.
“With the Texas House and Senate today announcing they are prepared to sine die on Friday, I will call the Texas Legislature back immediately for Special Session #2,” Abbott said Aug. 12. “The Special Session #2 agenda will have the exact same agenda, with the potential to add more items critical to Texans. There will be no reprieve for the derelict Democrats who fled the state and abandoned their duty to the people who elected them. I will continue to call special session after special session until we get this Texas first agenda passed.”
For many hemp industry stakeholders, the Texas House Democrats’ scheme to avert redistricting also represents a lifeline to protect roughly 8,000 businesses that provide a $10.3 billion economic impact on the state, employing some 50,000 workers, according to Whitney Economics.
The Texas Constitution requires two-thirds of state representatives, or 100 of 150 House members, to be present to reach a quorum and conduct legislative business, meaning if more than 50 representatives don’t show up, then everything comes to a halt.
Led by Texas House Democratic Caucus Chair Gene Wu, about 57 state representatives left the state earlier this month to block the chamber from voting on a congressional redistricting plan that could add five Republican seats to the U.S. House. The redistricting ploy could protect Republicans’ slim majority in Washington come the 2026 midterm election.
On Aug. 3, Illinois Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker welcomed Wu and other Texas Democrats to Chicago in support of their quorum-busting walkout. Other Democrats reportedly fled to Boston and Albany, N.Y. In Chicago, Wu accused Abbott of submitting to President Donald Trump’s call for Texas to redistrict via a “racist gerrymandered map” that will divide communities.
“We’re not here to have fun,” Wu said during a press conference that Pritzker hosted. “We did not make a decision lightly, but we come here today with absolute moral clarity that this is the absolutely the right thing to do to protect the people of the state of Texas.”
Wu also pointed out that while Texas Republicans wasted no time focusing on the redistricting map when the 30-day special session convened on July 21, they had nothing to show for in the first two weeks regarding legislation to improve early warning systems and other preparedness infrastructure in flood-prone areas. Abbott called for these improvements in the aftermath of the Central Texas flooding in early July, which resulted in more than 130 fatalities.
“They don’t even have a bill filed to deal with what they promised the deal with,” Wu said of disaster preparedness legislation. “Instead, they have spent their entire time playing dirty political games that only help themselves.”
The Texas Senate, which didn’t break quorum, finished up its special session business on Aug. 12, after passing 16 bills related to the governor’s call. Specifically, the natural disaster preparation and flood relief bills were the last the Senate focused on.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who presides over the Senate, touted the upper chamber for acting “quickly to develop a comprehensive plan to improve disaster preparedness and recovery,” including upgrading early warning systems, despite claims that he had neglected similar legislation during the regular session.
Democratic state Rep. James Talarico accused Patrick of playing a political game by blocking House-passed legislation that aimed to establish an emergency response plan for natural disasters like wildfires and floods—before the Central Texas flooding—so that he could attract support for Senate Bill 3, which aimed to ban intoxicating hemp products. Abbott later vetoed S.B. 3, calling for regulation instead.
“[Patrick] held that [House] bill hostage so that he could get his THC ban through,” Talarico said July 18 on The Joe Rogan Experience, a popular podcast.
Abbott clarified at the onset of the special session that he supports regulating a hemp industry for those 21 and older that limits consumable products to 0.3% THC or 3 milligrams of THC, while also banning products containing synthetic cannabinoids like delta-8 THC.
Despite this clarification from the governor, Patrick and state Sen. Charles Perry pushed S.B. 5 through in the special session, legislation that mirrored S.B. 3 from the regular session to ban hemp THC products. They passed S.B. 5 two weeks before the natural disaster preparedness legislation.
“I made Senate Bill 5 a top legislative priority for the Senate because we refuse to let these rogue retailers exploit loopholes in state law to sell dangerous THC products into our communities,” Patrick said on July 30. “These products, often containing dangerous levels of THC, are marketed directly towards young people with colorful packaging and images, making THC look like candy or sweets.”
While House Democrats left the state before the full lower chamber could take up S.B. 5, the Texas House Public Health Committee scheduled a hearing for the THC ban on Aug. 13. Despite the unlikelihood that the House will have a quorum to pass S.B. 5 before the end of the first special session, the hearing offers an opportunity for industry stakeholders to delivery testimony and take a public stand.
As the Senate worked toward finishing up the remainder of its agenda items earlier this week, Patrick said on Aug. 12 that House Democrats have “made their point” and now face a choice.
“They should return from their ‘vacation’ before Friday and pass the bills on the governor’s special session call,” the lieutenant governor said. “If not, the Texas Senate will adjourn sine die on Friday so Gov. Abbott can immediately call us back for another special session. This will continue in perpetuity. … The decision is theirs.”
From the governor’s office, Abbott ordered the Texas Department of Public Safety to arrest the “delinquent” House Democrats who “abandoned” their duty.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Klutch Cannabis Opening 5th Ohio Dispensary in Northfield

Published
10 minutes agoon
August 15, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – NORTHFIELD VILLAGE, Ohio, Aug. 15, 2025 – Klutch Cannabis, one of Ohio’s leading vertically integrated cannabis companies, announced the grand opening of its newest dispensary, located at 10650 Northfield Road in Northfield Village, Ohio. Doors will officially open at 10 a.m. Aug. 21, 2025.
The new location marks Klutch’s first dispensary in Summit County, where the company is headquartered. Conveniently situated directly across the street from the MGM Northfield Park Casino and Racetrack, the dispensary is easily accessible from Route 8 and I-271, finally bringing much-needed access to medical cannabis patients and adult-use consumers in Northern Summit County communities, including Northfield Village, Macedonia, Northfield Center Township, Twinsburg, Hudson, Sagamore Hills, Boston Township, Richfield Township, Bath Township, and more.
The expansion further solidifies Klutch’s retail footprint in Northeast Ohio and represents an important milestone as the company begins delivering its renowned top-shelf products on its home turf. Offerings will include exclusive drops and limited releases along with customer favorites from the company’s Klutch Cannabis and Habitat by Klutch lines, its Ohio-exclusive brand partners, and other Ohio cannabis companies. The Northfield dispensary will also feature Klutch’s signature aesthetic and exceptional customer service, as well as a convenient drive-thru pickup window for pre-orders.
Hours of operation for the new Northfield Village location will be:
- 10 a.m. to 10:45 p.m. Thursday through Saturday
- 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Wednesday
“We’re incredibly excited to expand Klutch Cannabis’s retail footprint to Summit County,” Klutch founder and CEO Adam Thomarios said. “This location has been years in the making and will finally provide patients and adult-use customers in Northern Summit County with access to the quality, care, and consistency that Klutch is known for. Our thanks go out, especially, to the community, administration, and officials in Northfield Village for being such great partners from the start. The Village is a great place to do business, and we can’t wait to start making a positive impact in the community.”
For more information about Klutch Cannabis, its dispensaries, and its award-winning products, visit KlutchCannabis.com and HabitatbyKlutch.com or follow @KlutchxCommunity and @HabitatbyKlutch on Instagram.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Book Review: The Traveling Cannabis Writer’s Guide to America’s Hidden Gems

Published
1 hour agoon
August 15, 2025
Every so often, a cannabis book comes along that feels like it has been missing from the shelf for years. Veronica “Vee” Castillo’s Cannabis Legacy Chronicles Series: The Traveling Cannabis Writer’s Guide to America’s Hidden Gems – Part 1: The 30,000-Foot View is one of those rare finds.
We read it cover to cover and it is clear: Vee has built something more than a travelogue. This is six years of crisscrossing the United States, living out of suitcases, rental cars, and guest rooms, documenting over 200 stories that mainstream media rarely touches.
The book brims with voices from every corner of the cannabis map: Black, Brown, and woman-owned businesses, legacy cultivators preserving genetics through prohibition, Caribbean entrepreneurs blending tradition with modern cannabis tourism, and women who left corporate jobs to open dispensaries, grow medicine, and build communities.
What sets it apart is Vee’s perspective. She writes like someone who has been in the grow rooms, sat at the kitchen tables, and walked the fields, not parachuting in for a quick profile but staying long enough to see the heartbeat of each place. Her chapters on women innovators, cultural preservation, and equity-driven tourism do not just inform, they inspire.
This is not a story about cannabis, the commodity. It is about cannabis, the connector.
If you care about the soul of this industry, if you want to see the people and places that make cannabis culture rich and resilient, this book delivers. It is equal parts history, advocacy, and celebration, wrapped in storytelling that is as authentic as it gets.
Vee will soon be bringing that same depth of reporting to High Times, and if Cannabis Legacy Chronicles is any indication, readers are in for something special.
We cannot recommend it enough. Grab your copy of Cannabis Legacy Chronicles: Part 1 here and see why we are so excited to welcome her to the High Times family.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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featured
Texas Senators Unanimously Pass Hemp THC Ban Bill Hours After Governor Convenes Second Special Session

Published
2 hours agoon
August 15, 2025
The governor of Texas has convened another special session—again directing lawmakers to advance legislation regulating consumable hemp and setting an age limit to access cannabinoids. Within hours, a Senate committee quickly and unanimously approved a reintroduced bill that would simply ban hemp THC products in contravention of Gov. Greg Abbott’s (R) call for regulation.
After Democratic House lawmakers staged a walkout during the first special session Abbott convened—denying the chamber a quorum in protest of a proposed redistricting plan for the state’s congressional map—the governor on Friday issued a proclamation to start a second special session. The session cannot last longer than 30 days under the state constitution, but there’s no limit on how many can be called.
On the same day Abbott declared the new session, the Senate State Affairs Committee quickly passed a reintroduced hemp bill from Sen. Charles Perry (R) in a 9-0 vote.
The legislation would continue to outright ban cannabis products with “any amount” of cannabinoids other the CBD and CBG. Even mere possession of a prohibited cannabis item would be punishable as a Class B misdemeanor, carrying up to 180 days in jail and a $2,000 fine.
The governor’s latest proclamation also renews his call for legislation “making it a crime to provide hemp-derived products to children under 21.”
But while Perry’s bill that moved through committee would impose a complete ban on hemp containing any THC, Abbott said in his latest proclamation that he wanted to see a measure sent to his desk that would “comprehensively regulate hemp-derived products, including limiting potency, restricting synthetically modified compounds, and establishing enforcement mechanisms, all without banning lawful hemp-derived products.”
Heather Fazio, director of the advocacy group Texas Cannabis Policy Center, told Marijuana Moment on Friday that the group is “disappointed to see the senate suspend their own rules to circumvent public notice requirements, disenfranchising the many Texans who would have testified in opposition to SB 6.”
“This is yet another sweeping ban on THC products,” she said. “Most Texans agree with Governor Abbott: The Texas legislature should regulate, not ban, THC products.”
(Disclosure: Fazio supports Marijuana Moment’s work via monthly Patreon pledges.)
An initial version of the governor’s new proclamation for the second special session said cannabinoid products should be age-gated to prohibit access for people under 18, but that was quickly revised and republished with the age limit of 21—similar to the call for the prior special session—for reasons that are unclear.
The proclamation for the new session also specifies that regulations should not ban “lawful hemp-derived products,” whereas the proclamation for the first session referenced a “lawful agricultural commodity.”
Special Session #2 begins immediately.
There is critical work that is left undone.
Texas will not back down from this fight.
That’s why I am calling them back today to finish the job.
Read my Special Session #2 agenda here: https://t.co/z9i949oQCw pic.twitter.com/jVE4S9hHAS
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) August 15, 2025
Hemp advocates and industry stakeholders say that would effectively eradicate the state’s market, as there are very few businesses that manufacture isolated CBD or CBG products that contain no traces to THC or other cannabinoids. Federal law allows hemp products containing up to 0.3 percent THC by dry weight.
A similar bill from Perry passed the Senate during the first special session but did not advance in the House.
The other new bill filed for the second special session from Rep. Charlie Geren (R) would follow the governor’s directive to make it so consumable hemp products could only be purchased by adults 21 and older.
Ahead of the end of the first special session, the House Public Health Committee took up the prior bill to ban consumable hemp products containing THC, without taking action on it.
Abbott vetoed an earlier version of the controversial proposal that passed during this year’s regular session, and he more recently outlined what he’d like to see in a revised version of the bill.
Some, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R) and Senate bill sponsor Perry, have insisted that an outright ban is a public safety imperative to rid the state of intoxicating products that have proliferated since the crop was federally legalized in 2018. Others say the legislature should instead enact regulations for the market to prevent youth access while still allowing adults 21 and older to access the products and preserving the massive industry.
—
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.
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Meanwhile, Abbott in June signed a bill into law that expanded the state’s list of medical cannabis qualifying conditions, adding chronic pain, traumatic brain injury (TBI), Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory bowel diseases, while also allowing end-of-life patients in palliative or hospice care to use marijuana.
Texas officials took another step toward implementing that law this week—posting a draft of proposed rules to let physicians recommend new qualifying conditions for cannabis and create standards for allowable inhalation devices.
That came about a week after the the Department of Public Safety (DPS) previewed a separate set of rules to increase the number of licensed dispensaries under recently passed legislation.
During the first special session, Rep. Nicole Collier (D) introduced a one-page bill, HB 42, designed to protect consumers in the state from criminal charges if what they believed was a legal hemp product turned out to contain excessive amounts of THC, making it illegal marijuana. It would prevent the criminalization of someone found in possession of a product that’s labeled as hemp but is determined to contain “a controlled substance or marihuana.”
In order for the person to obtain the legal protection, the product would need to have been purchased “from a retailer the person reasonably believed was authorized to sell a consumable hemp product.”
Another bill—HB 195, introduced by Rep. Jessica González (D)—would legalize marijuana for people 21 and older, allowing possession of up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis, with no more than 15 grams of that amount being in concentrated form.
Yet another proposal would order state officials to conduct a study on testing for THC intoxication.
As for what Texans themselves want to see from their representatives, proponents of reining in the largely unregulated intoxicating hemp industry in Texas shared new polling data indicating that majorities of respondents from both major political parties support outlawing synthetic cannabinoids, such as delta-8 THC.
The survey also found that respondents would rather obtain therapeutic cannabis products through a state-licensed medical marijuana program than from a “smoke shop selling unregulated and untested hemp.”
Ahead of the governor’s veto in June of SB 3—the earlier hemp product ban—advocates and stakeholders had delivered more than 100,000 petition signatures asking Abbott to reject the measure. Critics argued that the industry—which employs an estimated 53,000 people—would be decimated if the measure became law.
Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.

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

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