Business
What to expect from Ohio’s recreational cannabis rollout

Published
1 year agoon

This story was republished with permission from Crain’s Cleveland Business and written by Jeremy Nobile.
At least some Ohio cannabis companies will begin selling non-medical marijuana to the public in the coming weeks in what will mark a long-awaited milestone for supporters of last fall’s Issue 2 and progressive marijuana policy.
While the Ohio Division of Cannabis Control has not guaranteed any particular date for adult-use sales to begin, regulators continue to make progress with issuing provisional dual-use licenses to companies.
A dual-use license allows previously medical-only cannabis companies to operate in the non-medical industry while official rules for the adult-use program continue to be developed. A provisional version of that license is effectively a placeholder until a certificate of operation (COO) is awarded.
While no operators have received a COO so far through mid-July, legal, non-medical marijuana sales are nonetheless around the corner.
Here are several key things to know about the adult-use program as it enters the early stages of the rollout.
Adults — and cash — only
You probably know this, but buyers of adult-use marijuana products must be aged 21 or older and have a valid government ID to be admitted to a retailer’s sales floor.
Dispensaries continue to predominantly deal in cash, so plan to bring paper money with you. Many retailers have ATMs on site. And some may accept card transactions or use apps for payments, but this varies from business to business and tends to include additional fees.
What products will be available?
Products initially available to adult-use customers will be predominantly the same products that have been available to medical marijuana patients, including cannabis flower, edibles, vapes, concentrates, topicals and tinctures.
Where can you buy it?
Regulators plan to issue dual-use business licenses to operators on a rolling basis in roughly the order in which they’ve received applications. As such, it is not expected that every existing medical marijuana dispensary will come online for adult-use sales at the same time.
Wondering if a dispensary near you is licensed for dual-use? You can check licensing status for specific retailers and other companies through this DCC website. You can also tailor that search for a particular city or county.
The retail network will eventually grow as additional dispensary licenses, known as 10(B) licenses, are awarded in the future.
Pre-rolls will NOT be available — for now
The Issue 2 statute approved by voters last fall requires regulators to finalize rules and regulations for an adult-use market by Sept. 7. Until those official rules are in place—and this is where it can get a little confusing—adult-use products and sales are subject to rules set under the medical program.
Because adult-use sales will be initially subject to existing medical rules, there will be no pre-rolls available in the early stages of the rec market.
With respect to inhaling, under Ohio medical marijuana rules, vaping is a permitted form of consumption, but smoking is not. This is why there has yet to be any smokable, pre-rolled cannabis products such as joints, blunts or cones available at licensed dispensaries since medical sales began in Ohio in January 2019.
This will change in the future as updated rules are promulgated.
What will products cost?
What actual retail prices will look like on adult-use products remains to be seen.
However, expect elevated prices at the beginning when demand is high. Additionally, adult-use products are subject to both a 10% excise tax and sales tax.
With an average combined sales and local sales tax rate of approximately 7.24% in Ohio, according to the Tax Foundation, non-medical products will be taxed around 17%.
Andy Rayburn, CEO of Buckeye Relief and president of OHCANN, the state’s cannabis industry trade group, has previously said that adult-use products may, in general, cost somewhere in the ballpark of about 20% more than medical products now.
Around the end of June, the average sale price on flower in the state was about $21 per one-tenth of an ounce and $7.50 per gram, according to monthly DCC reports.
Prices typically come down over time as a market matures, supply increases and the novelty of legal marijuana wears off.
Are there purchase limits?
Rec customers will, at least initially, be subject to transaction limits framed by medical program rules that set permitted supply amounts—quantified in “day units”—for medical patients over periods of 45 and 90 days.
According to DCC officials, at the outset, buyers of non-medical marijuana may not purchase more than 10 day units worth of products in total, per day, across all types. That applies whether buying one product type or mixing and matching.
For flower, a day unit equals one-tenth of an ounce, or 2.83 grams.
The most an adult-use buyer could purchase of one product type on a particular day is:
• One ounce of flower
• 1,100mg THC of edibles
• 5,900mg THC in vapes or concentrates
That permitted sales amount does not reset if a customer looking to stock up buys the maximum daily supply at one store and then goes to another. Sellers will use a buyer’s ID to enter a purchase into a database — run by Metrc — which prevents this from occurring. You could buy half the daily maximum at one store and half at another, of course. But that net total someone is allowed to buy remains the same.
Dispensaries are charged with ensuring that transaction limits are not exceeded. Don’t expect them to bend the rules like sometimes occurs in other markets. Ohio regulators track cannabis closely from seed to sale, and any company found to be breaking rules could be at risk of losing a finite, and highly coveted, business license.
There are still benefits for medical patients
While Ohio’s medical marijuana market has been lackluster from an overall business perspective, there are still nearly 166,000 active and registered medical patients in the state and nearly 40,000 caregivers who aren’t being overlooked as the adult-use market comes online.
Medical patients will be given priority over rec customers. If there’s a line at the store, medical buyers can skip to the front.
There’s also the added benefit of skirting the excise tax as a medical customer.
And earlier this year, DCC dropped the annual fees for medical patients and caregivers from $50 and $25, respectively, to one cent.
There are still separate fees for meeting with a physician with a certificate to recommend marijuana to affirm medical marijuana qualifying conditions, of course, but registration fees are virtually eliminated.
Worried about lines?
Some dispensaries may accept call-ahead pre-orders, so customers worried about lines may want to check to see if they can schedule an order to pick up in advance to get in and out of a store more quickly.
Some shops even have drive-thru windows for pre-order pickups. But again, this varies, so consider checking with a store first if that option interests you.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Business
Nebraska medical cannabis regulations stall in legislative committee

Published
3 months agoon
April 18, 2025
A Nebraska legislative committee voted 5-3 against advancing a bill designed to implement and regulate the state’s medical cannabis program, leaving legislators and advocates searching for alternative paths forward, according to the Nebraska Examiner.
The General Affairs Committee rejected Legislative Bill 677, sponsored by State Sen. Ben Hansen of Blair, during a Thursday vote where committee members declined to offer amendments to the legislation, the publication reported.
“I don’t want to shut all the doors right now, but some doors are closing, and they’re closing fast, and so we have to act,” Hansen told reporters after the vote, according to the Examiner.
Nebraska voters approved medical cannabis in November 2024, with residents legally permitted to possess up to 5 ounces with a healthcare practitioner’s recommendation since mid-December. However, the regulatory commission created by the ballot initiative lacks effective power and funding to regulate the industry.
Hansen described his legislation as “a must” for 2025 to prevent a “Wild West” scenario in the state’s cannabis market. The bill would have expanded regulatory structure through the Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission and extended deadlines for regulations and licensing to allow more time for implementation, the Examiner noted.
Committee disagreements centered on proposed restrictions. A committee amendment would have prohibited smoking cannabis and the sale of flower or bud products while limiting qualified healthcare practitioners to physicians, osteopathic physicians, physician assistants or nurse practitioners who had treated patients for at least six months.
The amendment also would have limited qualifying conditions to 15 specific ailments including cancer, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, and chronic pain lasting longer than six months.
State Sen. Bob Andersen of Sarpy County opposed allowing vaping due to concerns about youth drug use, while committee chair Rick Holdcroft suggested selling cannabis flower would be “a gateway toward recreational marijuana,” a claim Hansen “heavily disputed,” according to the Examiner.
Hansen now faces a difficult path forward, requiring at least 25 votes to pull the bill from committee and then needing 33 senators to advance it across three rounds of debate, regardless of filibuster attempts.
Crista Eggers, executive director of Nebraskans for Medical Marijuana, remained optimistic despite the setback.
“This will not be the end,” Eggers said, according to the outlet. “Giving up has never been an option. Being silenced has never been an option. It’s not over. It’s not done.”
The legislative impasse is further complicated by ongoing litigation. Former state senator John Kuehn has filed two lawsuits challenging the voter-approved provisions, with one appeal pending before the Nebraska Supreme Court. The state’s Attorney General is also trying to do something about the hemp question, akin to other states across the country.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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Business
One of Las Vegas’ cannabis lounges closes its doors

Published
3 months agoon
April 18, 2025
Nevada’s cannabis lounge experiment faces some expected growing pains, with one of just two state-licensed venues closing its doors after barely a year in business, according to the Las Vegas Weekly.
“The regulatory framework, compliance costs and product limitations just don’t support a sustainable business model,” said Thrive Cannabis managing partner Mitch Britten, who plans to convert the space into an event venue until regulations loosen up.
The closure leaves Planet 13’s Dazed Consumption Lounge as the only operational state-regulated cannabis lounge in Nevada. Dazed manager Blake Anderson estimates the venue attracts around 250 customers daily, primarily tourists. One other establishment, Sky High Lounge, has operated since 2019 on sovereign Las Vegas Paiute Tribe land exempt from state regulations.
Even with Nevada regulators conditionally approving 21 more lounge licenses, potential owners are struggling to meet the $200,000 liquid assets requirement – particularly social equity applicants from communities hit hardest by prohibition.
Recreational marijuana has been legal statewide since 2017, but public consumption remains prohibited. That’s created an obvious disconnect for the millions of tourists who visit Las Vegas annually but have nowhere legal to use the products they purchase. The state recorded roughly $829 million in taxable sales during the 2024 fiscal year.
“It always comes down to money, and it’s difficult to get a space if you can’t afford to buy a building. On top of that, getting insurance and finding a landowner who’s willing to lease to a cannabis business is a challenge in and of itself,” said Christopher LaPorte, whose consulting firm Reset Las Vegas helped launch Smoke and Mirrors, told Las Vegas Weekly.
Many think the key to future success lies in legislative changes that would allow lounges to integrate with food service and entertainment – playing to Las Vegas’s strengths as a hospitality innovator. In the meantime, the industry will continue to adapt and push forward.
“Things take time,” LaPorte said. “There’s a culture that we have to continue to embrace and a lot of education that we still have to do. But at the end of the day, tourists need a place to smoke, and that’s what these places are.”

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

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