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Law OHIO MMJ



Recreational Marijuana becomes legal in Ohio next week — what to know


With Dec 7 fast approaching, Klutch Cannabis in Akron is getting ready for some big changes as a result of Ohio Issue 2.


“December 7 starts the clock, around the six-month mark I believe, applications will start going out. The timeline of nine months in September, provisional licenses could be granted,” said Pete Nischt, VP of compliance and communication with Klutch Cannabis.


Ohioans can start possessing and consuming marijuana when the law takes effect next Thursday. Adults 21 and older are allowed to have up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis and 15 grams of extracts.


However, according to Nischt, adults will not be able to immediately buy recreational marijuana in stores. At the earliest, it could be October.


“One thing we are watching very closely until then is what policy holders decide to do with the tax rate. That’s important because it speaks to the adult use market in Ohio, being able to compete with other sources of cannabis that Ohio consumers are using,” said Nischt.


Monday, House Bill 341 was introduced in the Ohio General Assembly, one of the first bills that would change Issue 2. It does not, however, change the 10% tax level on adult-use cannabis.


“That really deals with the allocation of the tax revenue, which is a related but separate issue,” said Nischt.


In the meantime, Nischt is reminding people that have a medical marijuana card to hold onto it.
 

Wow... unbelievable. Looks like Ohioans will be continuing to come to Michigan for their product.​

Ohio Senate Committee Advances Bill To Eliminate Marijuana Home Grow, Reduce Possession Limits And Raise Taxes—Days Before Legalization Takes Effect


An Ohio Senate committee has given initial approval to a newly unveiled proposal to fundamentally alter the state’s voter-approved marijuana legalization law that’s set to take effect later this week.

The legislation being advanced in the GOP-controlled chamber would eliminate a home grow option for adults, criminalize the use and possession of marijuana obtained outside of a licensed retailer, reduce the possession limit, raise the sales tax on cannabis and steer funding away from social equity programs and toward law enforcement—along with other amendments concerning THC limits, public consumption and changes to hemp-related rules that stakeholders say would “devastate” the market.

During a 30-minute hearing on Monday, the Senate General Government Committee voted 4-1 to attach the cannabis legislation to an unrelated House-passed bill on alcohol regulations. As revised, the legislation contains several provisions that Republican leaders have previewed in recent weeks since voters approved legalization at the ballot last month, but it also goes further, for example, by proposing to criminalize people who grow their own cannabis at home.

Senate President Matt Huffman (R) said he’s aiming to pass it on the floor as early as Wednesday before it’s potentially sent over to the House for concurrence. The plan is to get the changes enacted on an emergency before the legalization of possession and home cultivation becomes legal on Thursday.

Advocates and Democratic lawmakers have already expressed frustration with the leadership push to revise the voter-initiated statute. Republicans, including Gov. Mike DeWine (R), have insisted that voters were only supportive of the fundamental principle of legalizing marijuana without necessarily backing specific policies around issues such as tax revenue.

But while they’ve made that argument in the context of more incremental changes, the idea of eliminating home grow is likely to generate sizable pushback given its centrality to Issue 2. That could complicate its path to being enacted. An emergency clause would mean the billwould require a two-thirds vote instead of a simple majority to pass.

In repealing key sections of the initiated statute and replacing them with amended language, it appears the bill would also re-criminalize use and possession of marijuana if the product is obtained outside of a licensed retailer. And those retailers couldn’t open for at least one year after the effective date, so possession would effectively remain illegal under any circumstances until that point.

There’s no mandate for regulators to license retailers by a certain date, so it’s unclear when it would become legal to possess cannabis under the legislation.

“The silver lining in my opinion of some of this, if we want to look at it that way, is that marijuana has always been operating in a black market, the sale of marijuana for some time,” Sen. Rob McColley (R), who described the proposed changes, said at the committee hearing on Monday. “This is an opportunity for Ohio, if done correctly, to try and stamp out that black market to the extent possible, and then also put a program in place to make sure that Ohioans have accessible, reasonable and safe marijuana products for their purchase.”

In addition to striking home cultivation, the legislation would increase the excise tax rate on marijuana sales from 10 percent to 15 percent at the point of sale, in addition to a 15 percent gross receipts tax on cultivators.

As approved by voters, the law would have directed marijuana tax revenue to go to social equity and jobs programs (36 percent), localities that allow adult-use marijuana enterprises to operate in their area (36 percent), education and substance misuse programs (25 percent) and administrative costs of implementing the system (three percent).

The legislation that’s been attached to the revised bill would instead put 30 percent of revenue toward law enforcement training, 15 percent to substance misuse treatment, 10 percent to a safe driving initiative and the remainder to the state general fund.

It would cut the possession limit for adults from 2.5 ounces to one ounce. And it would reduce the THC limit from 35 percent for flower and 90 percent for extracts to 25 percent for flower and 50 percent for extracts.

Hemp industry stakeholders are also sounding the alarm about provisions that they say would “devastate the hemp industry in Ohio, and set back years of efforts in the state to support hemp farmers.”

The U.S. Hemp Roundtable sent out a call-to-action alert following Monday’s committee vote, imploring supporters to contact their representatives and urge them to oppose the amendment package because it would prohibit the sale of full-spectrum hemp products.

Hemp items could not contain more than 0.5 milligrams of delta-9 THC per serving (and a maximum of two milligrams per product). That would apply to non-ingestible hemp products such as topical CBD lotions, too. The legislation would additionally bar the sale of hemp containing other THC types like delta-8 and delta-10.

The bill as amended would also add criminal penalties for public consumption, restrict marijuana advertising, reduce the cap on cannabis dispensaries from 350 to 230 and allow localities to ban marijuana cultivators in their borders.

“Let’s look at what we’ve seen so far before of what works. Let’s have the safe product,” Senate General Government Committee Chairman Michael Rulli (R) said at his panel’s hearing. “My only concern for this is I want a safe product. I want no fentanyl. I want no mold…I want the black market destroyed. The people have spoken; I want them to buy a quality product that is safe for consumption. That is the goal of this committee to provide the people’s wishes with the safe product.”

Sen. William DeMora (D) criticized the proposal from his Republican colleagues, saying, “from my mind, the voters’ intent is nowhere to be found in this—what I call a shell of what the voters passed.”

While he said was “willing” to have a conversation about potentially limiting the number of plants that adults could grow under the initiated statute, he said “more than half the people that voted for this voted because of home growth, and so taking that away from what the voters clearly wanted is something that I have huge problem with.”

The chairman said the public only had until 2:30pm ET on Monday to submit comment on the cannabis legislation—just hours after it was unveiled and moved through committee during the brief hearing. No additional public testimony will be accepted on Tuesday or Wednesday before a potential vote to send it to the floor.



“Almost two years after first receiving Issue 2’s language and after Ohio voters overwhelmingly passed it, some in the Ohio Senate propose to gut Issue 2’s most important provisions, including home grow and social equity, and to put in place higher taxes that will entrench the illicit market and force Ohioans to continue to buy their cannabis products in Michigan,” Tom Haren, spokesperson for the Issue 2 campaign, said on Monday. “This is not what voters wanted.”

“What’s more, they will apparently attempt to declare an ‘emergency’ and to pass this bill (crafted behind closed doors) in a rushed process designed to prevent meaningful input—all to subvert the will of Ohio voters,” he said. “But let’s be clear: the democratic process is not an emergency. Members of the Ohio Senate should shelve this proposal and instead implement the results of a free and fair election in accordance with their duties as public servants.”

“Voters deserve to have the core components of Issue 2 respected by their elected officials with any changes being made only after robust opportunity for debate and participation by the general public,” Haren said.

Ohio Rep. Casey Weinstein (D), who has championed cannabis reform measures in the legislature, told Marijuana Moment on Monday that the amendment package that advanced in committee is “an unsurprising byproduct of Republicans at the statehouse who design their own districts to insulate themselves from the public will.”



“Ohio voters were very clear with us in overwhelming numbers, and this sham from Senate Republicans effectively overturns legalization,” he said.

Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies at the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), told Marijuana Moment that the revised bill is a “slap in the face to voters” that would “gut and replace Ohio’s voter-enacted law with Prohibition 2.0.”

“HB 86 eliminates home cultivation, more than doubles taxes, caps potency lower than any other state, and creates new penalties—including a three-day mandatory minimum for passengers vaping or smoking in a car or boat,” she said.

“Outrageously, it appears to completely do away with legal possession for at least a year,” she added, noting the lack of a deadline to authorize sales that would mean “regulators could indefinitely delay legalization.”

“If enacted, instead of December 7 being a day of cannabis freedom, consumers could find themselves facing harsher penalties than they did before Election Day,” O’Keefe said.

Unlike the Senate leader and governor, House Speaker Jason Stephens (R) has maintained that legislators should more thoughtfully address amendments to the initiated statute, even if that takes more time. He’s pointed out that changes to provisions on taxes and advertising, for example, wouldn’t become relevant until later next year given that regulators still need months to develop licensing rules before retailers open shop.

While some Democratic lawmakers have indicated that they may be amenable to certain revisions, such as putting certain cannabis tax revenue toward K-12 education, other supporters of the voter-passed legalization initiative are firmly against letting legislators undermine the will of the majority that approved it.

Ohio Rep. Juanita Brent (D) recently emphasized that people who’ve been criminalized over marijuana, as well as those with industry experience, should be involved in any efforts to amend the state’s voter-approved legalization law, arguing that it shouldn’t be left up to “anti-cannabis” legislators alone to revise the statute.

Meanwhile, Rep. Gary Click (R) filed legislation last week that would allow individual municipalities to locally ban the use and home cultivation of cannabis in their jurisdictions and also revise how state marijuana tax revenue would be distributed by, for example, reducing funds allocated to social equity and jobs programs and instead steering them toward law enforcement training.

Rep. Cindy Abrams (R) also introduced a bill last month that would revise the marijuana law by putting $40 million in cannabis tax dollars toward law enforcement training annually.

The Ohio Department of Commerce was quick to publish an FAQ guide for residents to learn about the new law and timeline for implementation, though regulators repeatedly noted that the policies may be subject to change depending on how the legislature acts.

Prohibitionist organizations that campaigned against Issue 2, meanwhile, are set on a fundamental undermining of the newly approved law, with some describing plans to pressure the legislature to entirely repeal legalization before it’s even implemented.

For what it’s worth, a number of Ohio lawmakers said in September that they doubted the legislature would seek to repeal a voter-passed legalization law. The Senate president affirmed repeal wasn’t part of the agenda, at least not in the next year.

Voters were only able to decide on the issue after lawmakers declined to take the opportunity to pass their own reform as part of the ballot qualification process. They were given months to enact legalization that they could have molded to address their outstanding concerns, but the legislature ultimately deferred to voters by default.

As early voting kicked off in late October, the GOP-controlled Senate passed a resolution urging residents to reject measure.

Unlike the top state Republican lawmakers, one of the state’s GOP representatives in Congress—Rep. Dave Joyce, co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, said in September that he would be voting in favor of the initiative in November. He encouraged “all Ohio voters to participate and make their voices heard on this important issue.”

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown (D-OH) said in late October he voted in favor of the legalization ballot initiative, calling it a “hard decision” but one that was based on his belief that the reform would promote “safety” for consumers.

Meanwhile, Vivek Ramaswamy, a 2024 Republican presidential candidate, said he voted against a ballot initiative to legalize marijuana in Ohio because he’s concerned the federal government could “weaponize” criminalization against people who are engaged in state-legal cannabis activities under the “fake” pretense that they’re protected from federal prosecution.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), for his part, said recently that Ohio’s vote to legalize marijuana at the ballot is one of the latest examples of how Americans are rejecting “MAGA extremism,” and he added that he’s committed to continuing to work on a bipartisan basis “to keep moving on bipartisan cannabis legislation as soon as we can.”

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, told Marijuana Moment that “the vote in Ohio was a great big exclamation point on the things we’ve been talking about.”

“We’ve been saying for years how this issue has crested, how it’s got broad momentum, how it is inclusive. It’s sort of like the success with the [Ohio abortion rights] issue—except this was more pronounced,” he said. “We got more votes than the abortion issue. We get more votes than anybody on the ballot.”

The White House has separately said that “nothing has changed” with President Joe Biden’s stance on marijuana, declining to say if he supports Ohio’s vote to legalize or whether he backs further reform of federal cannabis laws.

Meanwhile, as Ohio voters approved statewide legalization, activists also chalked up a series of little-noticed wins to decriminalize larger amounts of cannabis in three Ohio cities, according to preliminary county election results.

Read the text of the marijuana legalization amendment by following title link and scrolling to the bottom of the article.
 

Wow... unbelievable. Looks like Ohioans will be continuing to come to Michigan for their product.​

Ohio Senate Committee Advances Bill To Eliminate Marijuana Home Grow, Reduce Possession Limits And Raise Taxes—Days Before Legalization Takes Effect


An Ohio Senate committee has given initial approval to a newly unveiled proposal to fundamentally alter the state’s voter-approved marijuana legalization law that’s set to take effect later this week.

The legislation being advanced in the GOP-controlled chamber would eliminate a home grow option for adults, criminalize the use and possession of marijuana obtained outside of a licensed retailer, reduce the possession limit, raise the sales tax on cannabis and steer funding away from social equity programs and toward law enforcement—along with other amendments concerning THC limits, public consumption and changes to hemp-related rules that stakeholders say would “devastate” the market.

During a 30-minute hearing on Monday, the Senate General Government Committee voted 4-1 to attach the cannabis legislation to an unrelated House-passed bill on alcohol regulations. As revised, the legislation contains several provisions that Republican leaders have previewed in recent weeks since voters approved legalization at the ballot last month, but it also goes further, for example, by proposing to criminalize people who grow their own cannabis at home.

Senate President Matt Huffman (R) said he’s aiming to pass it on the floor as early as Wednesday before it’s potentially sent over to the House for concurrence. The plan is to get the changes enacted on an emergency before the legalization of possession and home cultivation becomes legal on Thursday.

Advocates and Democratic lawmakers have already expressed frustration with the leadership push to revise the voter-initiated statute. Republicans, including Gov. Mike DeWine (R), have insisted that voters were only supportive of the fundamental principle of legalizing marijuana without necessarily backing specific policies around issues such as tax revenue.

But while they’ve made that argument in the context of more incremental changes, the idea of eliminating home grow is likely to generate sizable pushback given its centrality to Issue 2. That could complicate its path to being enacted. An emergency clause would mean the billwould require a two-thirds vote instead of a simple majority to pass.

In repealing key sections of the initiated statute and replacing them with amended language, it appears the bill would also re-criminalize use and possession of marijuana if the product is obtained outside of a licensed retailer. And those retailers couldn’t open for at least one year after the effective date, so possession would effectively remain illegal under any circumstances until that point.

There’s no mandate for regulators to license retailers by a certain date, so it’s unclear when it would become legal to possess cannabis under the legislation.

“The silver lining in my opinion of some of this, if we want to look at it that way, is that marijuana has always been operating in a black market, the sale of marijuana for some time,” Sen. Rob McColley (R), who described the proposed changes, said at the committee hearing on Monday. “This is an opportunity for Ohio, if done correctly, to try and stamp out that black market to the extent possible, and then also put a program in place to make sure that Ohioans have accessible, reasonable and safe marijuana products for their purchase.”

In addition to striking home cultivation, the legislation would increase the excise tax rate on marijuana sales from 10 percent to 15 percent at the point of sale, in addition to a 15 percent gross receipts tax on cultivators.

As approved by voters, the law would have directed marijuana tax revenue to go to social equity and jobs programs (36 percent), localities that allow adult-use marijuana enterprises to operate in their area (36 percent), education and substance misuse programs (25 percent) and administrative costs of implementing the system (three percent).

The legislation that’s been attached to the revised bill would instead put 30 percent of revenue toward law enforcement training, 15 percent to substance misuse treatment, 10 percent to a safe driving initiative and the remainder to the state general fund.

It would cut the possession limit for adults from 2.5 ounces to one ounce. And it would reduce the THC limit from 35 percent for flower and 90 percent for extracts to 25 percent for flower and 50 percent for extracts.

Hemp industry stakeholders are also sounding the alarm about provisions that they say would “devastate the hemp industry in Ohio, and set back years of efforts in the state to support hemp farmers.”

The U.S. Hemp Roundtable sent out a call-to-action alert following Monday’s committee vote, imploring supporters to contact their representatives and urge them to oppose the amendment package because it would prohibit the sale of full-spectrum hemp products.

Hemp items could not contain more than 0.5 milligrams of delta-9 THC per serving (and a maximum of two milligrams per product). That would apply to non-ingestible hemp products such as topical CBD lotions, too. The legislation would additionally bar the sale of hemp containing other THC types like delta-8 and delta-10.

The bill as amended would also add criminal penalties for public consumption, restrict marijuana advertising, reduce the cap on cannabis dispensaries from 350 to 230 and allow localities to ban marijuana cultivators in their borders.

“Let’s look at what we’ve seen so far before of what works. Let’s have the safe product,” Senate General Government Committee Chairman Michael Rulli (R) said at his panel’s hearing. “My only concern for this is I want a safe product. I want no fentanyl. I want no mold…I want the black market destroyed. The people have spoken; I want them to buy a quality product that is safe for consumption. That is the goal of this committee to provide the people’s wishes with the safe product.”

Sen. William DeMora (D) criticized the proposal from his Republican colleagues, saying, “from my mind, the voters’ intent is nowhere to be found in this—what I call a shell of what the voters passed.”

While he said was “willing” to have a conversation about potentially limiting the number of plants that adults could grow under the initiated statute, he said “more than half the people that voted for this voted because of home growth, and so taking that away from what the voters clearly wanted is something that I have huge problem with.”

The chairman said the public only had until 2:30pm ET on Monday to submit comment on the cannabis legislation—just hours after it was unveiled and moved through committee during the brief hearing. No additional public testimony will be accepted on Tuesday or Wednesday before a potential vote to send it to the floor.



“Almost two years after first receiving Issue 2’s language and after Ohio voters overwhelmingly passed it, some in the Ohio Senate propose to gut Issue 2’s most important provisions, including home grow and social equity, and to put in place higher taxes that will entrench the illicit market and force Ohioans to continue to buy their cannabis products in Michigan,” Tom Haren, spokesperson for the Issue 2 campaign, said on Monday. “This is not what voters wanted.”

“What’s more, they will apparently attempt to declare an ‘emergency’ and to pass this bill (crafted behind closed doors) in a rushed process designed to prevent meaningful input—all to subvert the will of Ohio voters,” he said. “But let’s be clear: the democratic process is not an emergency. Members of the Ohio Senate should shelve this proposal and instead implement the results of a free and fair election in accordance with their duties as public servants.”

“Voters deserve to have the core components of Issue 2 respected by their elected officials with any changes being made only after robust opportunity for debate and participation by the general public,” Haren said.

Ohio Rep. Casey Weinstein (D), who has championed cannabis reform measures in the legislature, told Marijuana Moment on Monday that the amendment package that advanced in committee is “an unsurprising byproduct of Republicans at the statehouse who design their own districts to insulate themselves from the public will.”



“Ohio voters were very clear with us in overwhelming numbers, and this sham from Senate Republicans effectively overturns legalization,” he said.

Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies at the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), told Marijuana Moment that the revised bill is a “slap in the face to voters” that would “gut and replace Ohio’s voter-enacted law with Prohibition 2.0.”

“HB 86 eliminates home cultivation, more than doubles taxes, caps potency lower than any other state, and creates new penalties—including a three-day mandatory minimum for passengers vaping or smoking in a car or boat,” she said.

“Outrageously, it appears to completely do away with legal possession for at least a year,” she added, noting the lack of a deadline to authorize sales that would mean “regulators could indefinitely delay legalization.”

“If enacted, instead of December 7 being a day of cannabis freedom, consumers could find themselves facing harsher penalties than they did before Election Day,” O’Keefe said.

Unlike the Senate leader and governor, House Speaker Jason Stephens (R) has maintained that legislators should more thoughtfully address amendments to the initiated statute, even if that takes more time. He’s pointed out that changes to provisions on taxes and advertising, for example, wouldn’t become relevant until later next year given that regulators still need months to develop licensing rules before retailers open shop.

While some Democratic lawmakers have indicated that they may be amenable to certain revisions, such as putting certain cannabis tax revenue toward K-12 education, other supporters of the voter-passed legalization initiative are firmly against letting legislators undermine the will of the majority that approved it.

Ohio Rep. Juanita Brent (D) recently emphasized that people who’ve been criminalized over marijuana, as well as those with industry experience, should be involved in any efforts to amend the state’s voter-approved legalization law, arguing that it shouldn’t be left up to “anti-cannabis” legislators alone to revise the statute.

Meanwhile, Rep. Gary Click (R) filed legislation last week that would allow individual municipalities to locally ban the use and home cultivation of cannabis in their jurisdictions and also revise how state marijuana tax revenue would be distributed by, for example, reducing funds allocated to social equity and jobs programs and instead steering them toward law enforcement training.

Rep. Cindy Abrams (R) also introduced a bill last month that would revise the marijuana law by putting $40 million in cannabis tax dollars toward law enforcement training annually.

The Ohio Department of Commerce was quick to publish an FAQ guide for residents to learn about the new law and timeline for implementation, though regulators repeatedly noted that the policies may be subject to change depending on how the legislature acts.

Prohibitionist organizations that campaigned against Issue 2, meanwhile, are set on a fundamental undermining of the newly approved law, with some describing plans to pressure the legislature to entirely repeal legalization before it’s even implemented.

For what it’s worth, a number of Ohio lawmakers said in September that they doubted the legislature would seek to repeal a voter-passed legalization law. The Senate president affirmed repeal wasn’t part of the agenda, at least not in the next year.

Voters were only able to decide on the issue after lawmakers declined to take the opportunity to pass their own reform as part of the ballot qualification process. They were given months to enact legalization that they could have molded to address their outstanding concerns, but the legislature ultimately deferred to voters by default.

As early voting kicked off in late October, the GOP-controlled Senate passed a resolution urging residents to reject measure.

Unlike the top state Republican lawmakers, one of the state’s GOP representatives in Congress—Rep. Dave Joyce, co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, said in September that he would be voting in favor of the initiative in November. He encouraged “all Ohio voters to participate and make their voices heard on this important issue.”

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown (D-OH) said in late October he voted in favor of the legalization ballot initiative, calling it a “hard decision” but one that was based on his belief that the reform would promote “safety” for consumers.

Meanwhile, Vivek Ramaswamy, a 2024 Republican presidential candidate, said he voted against a ballot initiative to legalize marijuana in Ohio because he’s concerned the federal government could “weaponize” criminalization against people who are engaged in state-legal cannabis activities under the “fake” pretense that they’re protected from federal prosecution.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), for his part, said recently that Ohio’s vote to legalize marijuana at the ballot is one of the latest examples of how Americans are rejecting “MAGA extremism,” and he added that he’s committed to continuing to work on a bipartisan basis “to keep moving on bipartisan cannabis legislation as soon as we can.”

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, told Marijuana Moment that “the vote in Ohio was a great big exclamation point on the things we’ve been talking about.”

“We’ve been saying for years how this issue has crested, how it’s got broad momentum, how it is inclusive. It’s sort of like the success with the [Ohio abortion rights] issue—except this was more pronounced,” he said. “We got more votes than the abortion issue. We get more votes than anybody on the ballot.”

The White House has separately said that “nothing has changed” with President Joe Biden’s stance on marijuana, declining to say if he supports Ohio’s vote to legalize or whether he backs further reform of federal cannabis laws.

Meanwhile, as Ohio voters approved statewide legalization, activists also chalked up a series of little-noticed wins to decriminalize larger amounts of cannabis in three Ohio cities, according to preliminary county election results.

Read the text of the marijuana legalization amendment by following title link and scrolling to the bottom of the article.

Easy fix to entitled politicians thwarting clearly expressed will of the electorate via referendum....vote those bums out of office. Simple.

These morons...including the OH Senate President...just gave Democrats massive ammo for the next election.
 
Apparently politicians super power of laser like focus on preservation of their place at the public trough trumped all other considerations and they appear to have told their Senate President to go fuck himself.

Ohio Senate Approves Bill To Allow Marijuana Sales From Dispensaries ‘Immediately’, Keep Home Grow And Expunge Records


In a stunning reversal, Ohio’s GOP-controlled Senate passed a revised bill that in many ways would expand the voter-approved marijuana legalization law that goes into effect on Thursday—by allowing adults to start buying cannabis from existing medical dispensaries in as soon as 90 days, maintaining home cultivation rights and providing for automatic expungements of prior convictions, among other changes.


Just days after the Senate General Government Committee advanced legislation to fundamentally undo key provisions of the cannabis initiative voters passed at the ballot last month—proposing to eliminate the home grow option and delaying legalization for at least one year until adult-use retailers started sales, for example—the panel dramatically walked back the measure and passed it in a unanimous bipartisan voice vote on Wednesday.


The full Senate then approved the legislation in a vote of 28-2.


Although the Senate has moved quickly to institute changes to the legalization law before it takes effect on Thursday, it is not clear if the House is also ready to make any reforms on an expedited basis—meaning that one form of legal cannabis could take effect this week only to potentially be reformed within a matter of days.


The overhaul of the measure comes one day after the Senate panel held a hearing and received public testimony on the initial proposal, with many advocates and stakeholders expressing frustration with the seeming undermining of voters’ decision and recommending changes such as freeing up medical cannabis dispensaries to start servicing adult consumers while regulators develop rules to license recreational retailers.



Sen. Rob McColley (R) detailed the latest changes following negotiations during an extensive recess in committee on Wednesday, stating that lawmakers’ focus “needs to be stamping out the black market” and also “protecting the access that the people of Ohioans voted for,” while ensuring that the administrative implementation “runs as efficiently as it possibly can, while protecting opportunities for for Ohioans to engage in this new industry.”


Committee Chairman Michael Rulli (R) said that over “the last three or four days, a lot of the public has reached out to probably every single one of our senators with thousands of emails and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of calls.”


“I think the people have spoken,” he said.



Rather than do away with home cultivation, the committee-approved legislation would maintain adults’ right to grow up to six plants per person, though it would cap the household limit at six plants rather than 12 as set by the initiated statute.


As initially attached to an unrelated-House passed bill on alcohol regulations earlier this week, the measure would have effectively re-criminalized possession of marijuana unless it was obtained from a state-licensed retailer, which couldn’t start sales for at least one year from the effective date. That change was removed and replaced with language to “immediately” permit adults to buy cannabis from existing dispensaries as the adult-use market is established, McColley said. That could happen within 90 day’s of the bill’s passage, he explained.



Strikingly, the committee also revised the bill to provide for automatic expungements of certain prior cannabis-related convictions—a reform strongly favored by advocates that was not included in the Issue 2 initiative that voters approved, in large part due to a single-subject restriction for ballot measures.


Gov. Mike DeWine (R), speaking to reporters shortly after the committee vote, said that while he did not support the legalization ballot initiative, “we have an obligation to follow the will of the people, unless that’s changed at some point.”


“But we also have an obligation to make this work and to try to protect people who don’t want to be exposed to marijuana smoke, but also the people who are consuming marijuana to make sure that it is pure, that it is in fact it is safe,” he said. “I think it’s a very, very good bill. And, you know, it’s an imperative that this thing get passed. What we don’t want is a situation where the black market grows.”



<span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span>



The amended bill, as compared to the prior draft, restores the cap on marijuana retailers to 350, slightly increases the THC limit on cannabis extracts (though not to the level approved by voters) while restoring the original THC cap on flower, maintains a ban on sharing home cultivated marijuana among adults and makes revisions to the tax rate and revenue allocation, in part to support the facilitation of automatic expungements of convictions involving possession of up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana.


The marijuana excise tax would be set at 15 percent (up from 10 percent under the initiated statute), and local governments could levy an additional tax of up to three percent. The proposed 15 percent cultivator tax that was originally in the amendment package was removed.


The legislation calls for $15 million in marijuana tax revenue to go toward expungements. The remaining revenue would go to a Department of Public Safety law enforcement training (16 percent), an attorney general’s office law enforcement training fund (14 percent), drug law enforcement fund (five percent), poison control fund (two percent), substance misuse treatment (nine percent), suicide hotline services (nine percent), jail construction and renovation (28 percent), safe driver training (five percent) and more.


Because the cannabis language was attached to a non-controversial House-passed measure on alcohol regulations, it only needs a concurrence vote in the House. That’s not expected to happen according to the expedited timeline that Senate President Matt Huffman (R) has said he wants, however, meaning adults 21 and older will simply be able to legally possess up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana and grow up to six plants beginning on Thursday.


Huffman and other top Republicans, including the governor, have insisted that voters were only supportive of the fundamental principle of legalizing marijuana without necessarily backing specific policies around issues such as tax revenue. That argument has increasingly faced pushback from advocates and stakeholders, however.



Meanwhile, the House is looking at a different marijuana legalization amendment proposal filed by Rep. Jamie Callender (R). The House Finance Committee took up that legislation—which would preserve home grow and other key components of the voter-passed initiative, while making other changes opposed by advocates—in its own hearing on Wednesday.


“I want to address to the governor and the president of the Senate directly,” Callender said at Wednesday’s hearing. “They have a concern that we need to get something done before midnight tonight passed by both chambers and signed by the governor. The only thing that goes into effect tonight at midnight—that is the effective date of this initiative statute—will be the home grow and the possession amounts, two and a half ounces and six plants per household or 12 per family.”


“In the negotiations, our position has been that those two items were fundamental to what the people voted on. So even if, and hopefully when, we reach an agreement with the governor in the Senate, as long as those two things remained the same as the people voted for it, there is no drop-dead date of today.”


While it would also keep home grow, the bill from Callender, who introduced another bipartisan bill to legalize marijuana this session, would add residency requirements for where plants can be cultivated to avoid “multiple individuals aggregating their home grow plants into a single location, in essence creating an unofficial cultivation facility,” the sponsor said in written testimony.


The legislation would further strictly prohibit sharing of marijuana between adults, including giving away home-grown cannabis. And it would add advertising and marketing restrictions that Callender said would align marijuana rules with those in place for alcohol and tobacco.


In addition to the 10 percent excise tax on marijuana sales, the House bill would impose a 10 percent tax on cultivators’ gross receipts. Revenue from the cultivator tax would go toward creating and renovating jails (36 percent), county sheriffs in areas with at least one cultivator (36 percent), law enforcement training (23 percent) and a crime victims assistance fund (five percent).



For the sales tax revenue, the 36 percent that Issue 2 allocated to social equity programs would instead go to counties for the purposes of funding equity grants and a job placement program, as well as “any other purpose that involves community engagement, economic development, or social programming.”


Another 36 percent would go to local governments with cannabis shops, 12.5 percent would support the 988 suicide and crisis lifeline, 10 percent would fund mental health treatment in county jails, three percent would cover administrative costs of regulating the cannabis market and 2.5 percent would go to a substance misuse treatment fund.


The sponsor said on Wednesday that he expects “we will probably have some discussions and amend” the tax provisions and “possibly other things as they come up that I’m not even aware of” before the legislation advances through the House committee next week.


“Back in November, the voters of Ohio approved Issue 2 by a margin of 56.97 percent to allow adult use cannabis in Ohio,” Callender said in his testimony. “HB 354 does not aim to change the intent of Issue 2 or override the will of the voters. Instead, it aims to add clarification for the departments who will be tasked with administering and regulating adult use cannabis in Ohio.”


“Another reason for not trying to cram something through today but rather thoughtfully approach what we’re doing [is to] make sure we have buy-in from everybody—that everyone is comfortable with what we’re doing and that we can move forward unified,” he said. “We want to respect the integrity of what the people voted on—but we have a lot of flexibility within that framework.”


Callender also took a question about cannabis expungements and said he’s “very supportive” of the reform, referencing separate bipartisan legislation on the issue, and he’s not opposed to adding it to his amendment measure. However, “my goal is to have a very broad-based support” so it may need to be handled separately.



At Wednesday’s hearing, Finance Committee Chairman Jay Edwards (R) said that while he was “ardent against Issue 2 that we just voted on, I do think that I will put my foot down and respect the will of the voters.”


“Does that mean that we need to make changes? Yeah, there probably are some changes that need made,” he said. “But I think as a chair of this committee and bills that run through this committee, I will do my best to make sure that we respect the will of the voters. November’s over with—that election is over with.”


House Speaker Jason Stephens (R)—who has maintained that legislators should more thoughtfully address amendments to the initiated statute, even if that takes more time—hasn’t weighed in on the merits of Callender’s bill but said “we will have discussions on that.”


“There are a lot of different ideas that are going on about it and we’ll continue the discussion,” he said.


While some Democratic lawmakers have indicated that they may be amenable to certain revisions, such as putting certain cannabis tax revenue toward K-12 education, other supporters of the voter-passed legalization initiative are firmly against letting legislators undermine the will of the majority that approved it.


Ohio Rep. Juanita Brent (D) recently emphasized that people who’ve been criminalized over marijuana, as well as those with industry experience, should be involved in any efforts to amend the state’s voter-approved legalization law, arguing that it shouldn’t be left up to “anti-cannabis” legislators alone to revise the statute.


Meanwhile, Rep. Gary Click (R) filed legislation last week that would allow individual municipalities to locally ban the use and home cultivation of cannabis in their jurisdictions and also revise how state marijuana tax revenue would be distributed by, for example, reducing funds allocated to social equity and jobs programs and instead steering them toward law enforcement training.
 
"Cat Packer, vice chair of Cannabis Regulators of Color Coalition (CRCC)"

I seem to dimly remember a logical/mathematical principle that said substitute on value of a variable with another and if the result is the same, then they are equivalent.

So, do you think our society would be as sanguine about the above named organization as they would "Cannabis Regulators of White People Coalition"?

Yeah, I don't think so either.

In the meantime, I would surely hope that the voters in OH have enough self-respect to kick to the curb any assholes in their state legislature who supports any sort of constructive change to what they passed via referendum....to the curb and down the sewer, IMO.


Ohio House Lawmakers Take Up GOP Bill To Amend Voter-Approved Marijuana Law As Alternative To Senate Overhaul


Ohio House lawmakers held another committee hearing on a bill to revise the state’s newly enacted marijuana legalization law, hearing additional testimony ahead of an expected vote on Wednesday.


After taking public input on the legislation from Rep. Jamie Callender (R) last week, the House Finance Committee met again on Tuesday to hear from additional advocates and stakeholders as Senate Republicans work to advance a separate revision package that’s sparked significant pushback.


The House bill is considered more palatable to reform supporters, as it’d make less sweeping changes to what voters approved on the November ballot—especially compared to the Senate legislation that initially called for the elimination of home cultivation and an indefinite delay on basic legalization provisions. That latter measure was significantly altered amid criticism last week, but it’s still facing sizable opposition.


Senate President Matt Huffman (R) originally aimed to pass the bill under an emergency prior to legalization taking effect last week, but that didn’t happen according to his timeline. House Speaker Jason Stephens (R), meanwhile, has said he doesn’t see the need to rush amending the initiated statute given that sales won’t begin until later in 2024.


The GOP House and Senate leaders have disagreed on certain procedural issues related to amending the marijuana law such as the timeline for enactment, but they’ve both generally expressed support for the idea of making changes such as revising the tax structure, preventing public consumption and deterring impaired driving.


In the House Finance Committee, members took additional public testimony on Tuesday, hearing from interested parties who expressed concern about issues such as the bill’s continued criminalization of sharing marijuana between adults and the redirection of tax revenue away from equity and toward law enforcement.


“My concern is that, through some of the reforms that I’m seeing being introduced in this legislature, we would be moving from puff-puff-pass to puff-puff-police and that is in total contradiction to what Ohio voters voted in support of,” Cat Packer, vice chair of Cannabis Regulators of Color Coalition (CRCC) and director of drug markets and legal regulation at the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), said in testimony to the committee.


Tim Johnson of Cannabis Safety First insisted that lawmakers build in explicit protections for marijuana consumers, or risk people continuing to buy cannabis from the unregulated market.


“It comes down to the principle of, we’re really not asking for your permission to participate in the cannabis consumption or manufacturing. We’ve been doing that in Ohio for 50 plus years without the permission from any legislative body,” he said. “We’ve been doing it for 50 years, to the tune of about a $4 billion industry in Ohio that’s unregulated and untaxed.”


“So what I simply ask is that you stop criminalizing the cannabis community—the cannabis industry as a whole in Ohio, from the patient to the consumer to the license holders,” he said. “Allow us to be a part of what you consider the normal society, normal community. Allow us to be taxpaying individuals. Allow us to be productive members of society.”


The panel is scheduled to meet again on Wednesday, with members expected to vote on sending the legislation to the floor for consideration. The House speaker has said the full chamber will not be voting on Callender’s proposal on Wednesday, nor will it be concurring on the separate cannabis bill passed by the Senate last week.


The Senate proposal has a different trajectory. It was first attached to a non-controversial House-passed bill before being amended and approved in the Senate General Government Committee and then on the floor.


Advocates are more concerned about the Senate plan. While it was significantly revised from its original form in committee—restoring home cultivation, for example—reform advocates say it still undermines the will of voters who passed the legalization initiative at the ballot last month.


Top Republicans, including Gov. Mike DeWine (R), have insisted that voters were only supportive of the fundamental principle of legalizing marijuana without necessarily backing specific policies around issues such as tax revenue.


“I think that people did not vote for the situation that we’re going to have if we don’t change it. And that is that it’s legal now to possess marijuana, legal to use it, but you can’t buy it legally,” DeWine said on Monday, expressing support for the Senate bill that would let adults purchase cannabis from existing medical dispensaries in three months, rather than wait for retailers to open later next year.


Here how the House bill from Callender, HB 354, would change Ohio’s marijuana law:


  • Keep home grow option for up to six plants per adult and 12 plants per household.
  • Prohibit sharing of marijuana between adults, including giving away home-grown cannabis.
  • In addition to the original 10 percent excise tax on marijuana sales, the bill would impose a 10 percent tax on cultivators’ gross receipts.
  • Revenue from the cultivator tax would go toward creating and renovating jails (36 percent), county sheriffs in areas with at least one cultivator (36 percent), law enforcement training (23 percent) and a crime victims assistance fund (five percent).
  • Redirect tax revenue from social equity programs to counties for the purposes of funding equity grants and a job placement program, as well as “any other purpose that involves community engagement, economic development, or social programming.”
  • Another 36 percent would go to local governments with cannabis shops, 12.5 percent would support the 988 suicide and crisis lifeline, 10 percent would fund mental health treatment in county jails, three percent would cover administrative costs of regulating the cannabis market and 2.5 percent would go to a substance misuse treatment fund.
  • Ban public smoking and restrict advertising in a manner similar to how tobacco and alcohol products are treated.

Here’s what the revised Senate-passed measure, HB 86, would do to the state’s marijuana law:


  • Allow adults to grow up to six plants, but limit households to a total of six instead of 12.
  • Only legalize possession of marijuana from retailers or home-cultivated products.
  • Permit existing medical cannabis dispensaries to start serving adult-use consumers within 90 days of enactment, rather than nine months under Issue 2’s provisions.
  • Prohibit sharing of marijuana between adults.
  • Require the state attorney general to create a process to reimburse people for costs associated with proactively petitioning the court for expungements of prior convictions involving possession of up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis.
  • Eliminate social equity revenue fund and redirect significant portions of revenue toward law enforcement training.
  • Raise marijuana excise tax to 15 percent (up from 10 percent) and allow local governments to levy an additional tax of up to three percent.
  • Allocate $15 million in marijuana tax revenue annually to go toward facilitating expungements.
  • Remaining revenue would go to a Department of Public Safety law enforcement training (16 percent), an attorney general’s office law enforcement training fund (14 percent), drug law enforcement fund (five percent), poison control fund (two percent), substance misuse treatment (nine percent), suicide hotline services (nine percent), jail construction and renovation (28 percent), safe driver training (five percent) and more.
  • Reduce THC cap on adult-use marijuana extracts to 50 percent, rather than 90 percent under Issue 2.
  • Lower canopy limits on cultivation facilities.
  • Remove anti-discrimination provisions concerning cannabis consumer rights in child custody and eligibility for organ transplants.
  • Mandate strict rules on transporting and storing cannabis.
  • Impose a three-day mandatory minimum jail sentence for passengers who consume marijuana in a car.

In contrast, here’s what Issue 2 would accomplish as passed by voters:


  • Legalize possession of up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis for adults 21 and older, who could also have up to 15 grams of marijuana concentrates.
  • Grow up to six plants for personal use, with a maximum 12 plants per household.
  • Impose a 10 percent sales tax would be imposed on cannabis sales, with revenue being divided up to support social equity and jobs programs (36 percent), localities that allow adult-use marijuana enterprises to operate in their area (36 percent), education and substance misuse programs (25 percent) and administrative costs of implementing the system (three percent).
  • Establish a Division of Cannabis Control under the state Department of Commerce. It would have authority to “license, regulate, investigate, and penalize adult use cannabis operators, adult use testing laboratories, and individuals required to be licensed.”
  • Give current medical cannabis businesses a head start in the recreational market. Regulators would need to begin issuing adult-use licenses to qualified applicants who operate existing medical operations within nine months of enactment.
  • The division would also be required to issue 40 recreational cultivator licenses and 50 adult-use retailer licenses “with a preference to applications who are participants under the cannabis social equity and jobs program.” And it would authorize regulators to issue additional licenses for the recreational market two years after the first operator is approved.
  • Individual municipalities would be able to opt out of allowing new recreational cannabis companies from opening in their area, but they could not block existing medical marijuana firms even if they want to add co-located adult-use operations. Employers could also maintain policies prohibiting workers from consuming cannabis for adult use.
  • Require regulators to “enter into an agreement with the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services” to provide “cannabis addiction services,” which would involve “education and treatment for individuals with addiction issues related to cannabis or other controlled substances including opioids.”
  • The measure includes a provision requiring regulators to “study and fund” criminal justice reform initiatives including expungements.

“The Senate ultimately backed down on some of the most outrageous aspects of its initial proposal, including re-criminalizing home cultivation and reducing possession limits, and added two positive changes—expungement and earlier sales,” Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies at the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), said in written testimony to the House panel on Tuesday. “But HB 86 still includes numerous unreasonable provisions that the House should reject.”


While some Democratic lawmakers have indicated that they may be amenable to certain revisions, such as putting certain cannabis tax revenue toward K-12 education, other supporters of the voter-passed legalization initiative are firmly against letting legislators undermine the will of the majority that approved it.


Ohio Rep. Juanita Brent (D) recently emphasized that people who’ve been criminalized over marijuana, as well as those with industry experience, should be involved in any efforts to amend the state’s voter-approved legalization law, arguing that it shouldn’t be left up to “anti-cannabis” legislators alone to revise the statute.


Meanwhile, Rep. Gary Click (R) filed legislation earlier this month that would allow individual municipalities to locally ban the use and home cultivation of cannabis in their jurisdictions and also revise how state marijuana tax revenue would be distributed by, for example, reducing funds allocated to social equity and jobs programs and instead steering them toward law enforcement training.


Rep. Cindy Abrams (R) also introduced a bill last month that would revise the marijuana law by putting $40 million in cannabis tax dollars toward law enforcement training annually.
 
Ohio GOP Governor Pushes Lawmakers To Fix ‘Ridiculous’ Marijuana Sales Delay And Send Tax Revenue To Police

The governor of Ohio is pushing lawmakers to take action as soon as possible to address the “ridiculous situation” the state has found itself in, where marijuana is now legal to possess and use but without any place for consumers to purchase regulated products from.


Gov. Mike DeWine (R) said that the Senate passed a “good bill” to make various changes to the legalization law that voters approved at the ballot last month, but the House didn’t act before lawmakers adjourned for the year. He said he’s spoken with House Speaker Jason Stephens (R), who assured him that the chamber would work to “fix these problems” when they return.


While DeWine opposed the legalization initiative that voters overwhelmingly approved, he said “what’s important is we go forward,” starting with enacting reforms to provide legal access to cannabis sooner than later. The Senate bill, for example, would allow existing medical marijuana dispensaries to begin sales to adult consumers within 90 days of enactment, rather than licensing retailers in nine months under the current timeline.


“I don’t think anybody who voted for [legalization] thought that we would have a situation like we do today,” the governor said, adding that he doesn’t want Ohio to experience the same issues that New York has faced throughout its protracted legalization rollout, with illicit retailers proliferating.


“The legislature needs to take action now so that we could actually start selling it in Ohio legally and control how it is being sold—and so that the person who’s buying it knows exactly what in fact they’re they’re getting,” DeWine told WSYX in an end-of-year interview that aired on Thursday.





He also wants lawmakers to tackle what he described as a “loophole” in the state’s current law by restricting the sale of intoxicating hemp-derived cannabinoids such as delta-8 THC.


The governor was also asked about a separate proposal that’s been floated by lawmakers to redirect marijuana tax revenue toward law enforcement training, which is also a policy change that would be implemented under the Senate-passed bill. Under the voter-approved initiative, in contrast, significant funds would go to equity and job placement.


DeWine said he “very much” supports the plan to redirect the funds, stating that “this is our once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, as much as I was against passing this.”


“We need to take this money and do something very positive with it,” he said. “A logical place to invest this money, or at least part of this money, is in good police training.”


Advocates are more skeptical of the proposal, which was also discussed in a series of hearings in the House Finance Committee as lawmakers considered a separate package to amend the state’s marijuana law. Activists have expressed frustration with the idea of putting more dollars toward police when one of the key objectives of legalization is to divorce marijuana and law enforcement.


The bills that advanced in the GOP-controlled legislature earlier this month have varied in several respects. The Senate plan would expedite sales, but it would also decrease the household cap for home-grown marijuana, impose new THC limits, restrict public consumption, reallocate tax revenue and more.


A separate House bill from Rep. Jamie Callender (R) is generally considered more palatable to reform supporters, as it’d make less sweeping changes to what voters approved. However, it would ban sharing marijuana between adults, add a cultivator tax and similarly make several changes to the tax revenue distribution.
 
Oh.... they have a place to buy it alright lol.... one mile across the state line in Michigan. :lol:

Ohio Marijuana Law Has Created A ‘Goofy Situation,’ Governor Says, With Legal Possession But No Place To Buy It


Ohio’s governor says the state’s current marijuana law—under which it is now legal for adults to grow, possess and consume but with no place to purchase regulated cannabis—has created a “goofy situation” and “real mess” in light of the fact that retailers aren’t expected to open for business until at least the end of this year.

“It’s legal to consume marijuana. It’s legal to grow marijuana. But you can’t buy the seeds and you can’t buy the marijuana,” Gov. Mike DeWine (R) said Thursday in a media interview. “All this is doing is fostering a bigger black market, because people think they can buy it legally, and you’re seeing advertising that is being done.”

DeWine proposed allowing the state’s existing medical dispensaries to begin selling marijuana to all adults, not just registered medical patients—a change that would need to be made by state lawmakers.

“Give us the authority to start selling marijuana in the state of Ohio, and the way that we would have to do it, to start with at least, is to do the medical dispensaries,” he said. “We could do that and probably turn that on within about 60 days after the legislature passes an initiative.”



DeWine himself campaigned against the legalization ballot measure that voters approved last year, though he acknowledged it “passed with a good margin—57 percent of the vote.” Going forward, he said, “we should be able to have what the people asked for, and I think what the people asked for is to be able to buy marijuana where it is regulated.”

DeWine also pointed to “other issues that probably have to be resolved” around cannabis legalization, including how state tax revenue will be spent.

“We just need the House and the Senate to get back together to start talking about this, and let’s get a bill that we can move forward on,” he added.

The governor said he supports a plan passed last month by Senate lawmakers that would allow sales to begin “immediately” through medical dispensaries, though even if that plan proceeds, it will likely take months before sales begin.

Cannabis advocates have pushed back against some other provisions of the Senate plan, which would also decrease the household cap for home-grown marijuana, impose new THC limits, restrict public consumption and reallocate tax revenue, among other changes to the voter-passed law.

A separate House bill is considered more palatable to reformers, as it would make less sweeping changes to what voters approved. However, it would ban sharing marijuana between adults, add a cultivator tax and similarly make several changes to the tax revenue distribution.

DeWine previously voiced support for the idea of moving marijuana tax dollars to law enforcement—a policy change opposed by advocates who want to maintain funding for social equity initiatives as prescribed under the ballot initiative voters approved.

At Friday’s press event, DeWine also discussed delta-8 THC products, which use cannabinoids derived by hemp and are unregulated at the federal level and in most states. On that issue, too, he urged legislative action.

“The legislature can separate this, in a bill, from the marijuana, or they can put it in the same bill,” the governor said. “I don’t really care. That’s up to the legislature. But this is nasty stuff, and it’s being marketed to kids.”

“I’m asking the legislature to take action on that,” he said, “and to take action quickly.”

DeWine governor held a press conference a day earlier calling for a state ban or other restrictions on delta-8 products.

With respect to the broader legalization implementation debate, some Democratic lawmakers have indicated that they may be amenable to certain revisions, such as putting certain cannabis tax revenue toward K–12 education. But other supporters of the voter-passed legalization initiative are firmly against letting legislators undermine the will of the majority that approved it.

His comments come on the heels of a separate interview earlier this month in which he pushed lawmakers to allow marijuana sales “very quickly” and to ban or limit hemp-derived cannabinoid products
 

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