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Good Housekeeping: “I Smoked Weed to Help My Postpartum Depression — And I Want Other Moms to Do the Same” by By Sarah Yahr Tucker
zidongchn commented on Lisa's blog entry in Tokeativity HQ Blog
This article brings up an important discussion about alternative treatments for postpartum depression. It's great to see more conversations about cannabis as a potential solution, as mentioned in the Good Housekeeping piece about motherhood and mental health. For more insights, check out this related article on scritchy scratchy. -
Good Housekeeping: “I Smoked Weed to Help My Postpartum Depression — And I Want Other Moms to Do the Same” by By Sarah Yahr Tucker
zidongchn commented on Lisa's blog entry in Tokeativity HQ Blog
This article brings up an important discussion about alternative treatments for postpartum depression. It's great to see more conversations about cannabis as a potential solution, as mentioned in the Good Housekeeping piece about motherhood and mental health. For more insights, check out this related article on scritchy scratchy. -
Splimm: “Splimming with Tokeativity: Empowered Women Empower Women” by Jenn Lauder
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Marijuana legalization might be a popular policy issue in recent polls, but most Americans don’t think cannabis itself is “cool,” according to a new survey. In fact, marijuana is considered less cool than things like sourdough bread, country music, math, word games and reading books. The YouGov poll looked at public opinion on the subjective concept of coolness—with findings that might challenge conventional thinking. When it comes to a wide range of commodities and activities, marijuana stood out as a comparatively lame, falling near the bottom of the cool list despite being commonly associated with popular cultural figures, political movements and lifestyles. If that comes as a surprise to people, they wouldn’t be alone. In a separate question in the new survey, respondents overrated how cool other people think marijuana is as compared to their own views. Overall, just 36 percent of American adults described marijuana as cool, with 13 percent saying it is “very cool” and 23 percent grading it as “somewhat cool.” Another 10 percent weren’t sure, while 55 percent said cannabis isn’t cool—with 35 rating it as “not cool at all” and 20 percent believing it is “not very cool.” The survey listed a total of 36 things or activities that respondents were tasked with rating on a coolness scale. Marijuana was was the fourth to last on that list, with just guns, sports betting and cryptocurrency considered less cool. Perhaps as surprising as the relative un-coolness of cannabis were some of the items that ranked as significantly more cool. Among the picks that a majority of adults described as either very or somewhat cool were science (87 percent), outer space (83 percent), reading books (81 percent), tea (65 percent), math (59 percent), sourdough bread (59 percent), country music (56 percent) and avocados (51 percent). Via YouGov. “The results suggest the typical American is a bit of a square,” YouGov’s senior data journalist David Montgomery wrote. However, “there are many activities that Americans are less likely to consider cool than to think other people think are cool.” To that point, the survey’s cannabis finding showed that it’s somewhat common for people to overestimate how cool other people view marijuana. Just over one-third of adults said they themselves think cannabis is cool, but the respondents on average said they expected about half of other people (49 percent) to regard it as cool. Via YouGov. The poll involved interviews with 2,236 U.S. adults from April 9-17, with a +/- 3 percentage point margin of error. That’s a relatively common margin for online surveys. But as Montgomery conceded, it’s worth noting that, in this poll, the adults who were asked to judge what’s cool and what’s not cool are also adults who voluntarily elected to take an online survey in the first place. Meanwhile, a polling report from the Pew Research Center released in March found that Americans across every demographic—age, gender, religion and political affiliation—all agree that using marijuana is not morally wrong. However, Republicans are still twice as likely as Democrats to say consuming cannabis is a moral no-no. Pew also released a poll last year that showed an overwhelming majority of Americans—nearly 9 in 10—support legalizing marijuana in some form. An earlier Pew survey from 2024 separately highlighted views on the societal impacts of recreational legalization, and a majority (52 percent) said the reform is “good” for local economies. A 42 percent plurality additionally agreed that legalization would make the criminal justice system “more fair.” The post Americans Say Marijuana Is Less Cool Than Math And Country Music—But Is Cooler Than Guns Or Cryptocurrency, Survey Shows appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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Marijuana Moment: Virginia cannabis sales bill vetoed by governor (Newsletter: May 20, 2026)
Tokeativity posted a topic in Marijuana Moment
Army wants soldiers about marijuana, hemp & CBD; CA emergency cannabis rules for rescheduling relief; LA marijuana penalty bill to gov; Opioid study Subscribe to receive Marijuana Moment’s newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. It’s the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible… Before you dig into today’s cannabis news, I wanted you to know you can keep this resource free and published daily by subscribing to Marijuana Moment on Patreon. We’re a small independent publication diving deep into the cannabis world and rely on readers like you to keep going. Join us at https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment / TOP THINGS TO KNOW Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D) vetoed legislation to legalize recreational marijuana sales after lawmakers rejected her proposed amendments to delay the launch of the market by six months, increase taxes and institute new criminal penalties for cannabis consumers. The U.S. Army published a warning reminding soldiers that use of cannabis is prohibited—including “even common hemp items containing CBD, such as vape juices, food, hair care products, oils, lotions and other cosmetics.” “All types of cannabinoids can pose risks to both physical and mental readiness.” The California Department of Cannabis Control is proposing emergency rules aimed at making it easier for the state’s marijuana businesses to take advantage of federal benefits under the Trump administration’s rescheduling move by letting those with current licenses covering both medical and recreational products secure a secondary license through a streamlined process to separate out the segments of their operations. Louisiana lawmakers sent Gov. Jeff Landry (R) a bill that threatens to send people to jail for up to one year if they smoke marijuana within 2,000 feet of a school property—including college campuses. A new federally funded study that analyzed claims data on 107.5 million commercially insured adults found that marijuana legalization is “associated with significant reductions in non-fatal opioid poisonings.” “Greater cannabis access…may reduce [non-fatal opioid poisoning diagnoses] in heavily impacted populations, indicating possible substitution of cannabis for opioids.” The deputy senior director of the Colorado Marijuana Enforcement Division said that the amount of chemically converted hemp being illegally sold as marijuana is “larger than we can quantify” and “would probably explode your minds” in a meeting with industry representatives, according to a leaked recording. / FEDERAL The Drug Enforcement Administration is proposing to change the process by which it sets annual production quotas for drugs. The Substance Use and Mental Health Services Administration issued an advisory on addressing cannabis use disorder. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) cited Tennessee’s failure to enact medical or recreational marijuana legislation as an example of how the state is “really backwards” and “slow.” Nebraska independent U.S. Senate candidate Dan Osborn posted a video of himself discussing medical cannabis and Sen. Pete Ricketts’s (R-NE) opposition to it. Florida Republican congressional candidates agreed on opposing legalizing marijuana during a debate. / STATES Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey (D) appointed new members to a restructured Cannabis Control Commission. The New Jersey Assembly passed a bill to allow sales of large-container hemp beverages and to let medical cannabis dispensaries add adult-use marijuana sales without local approval. A former New Hampshire representative coauthored an op-ed criticizing federal marijuana rescheduling. Oregon regulators filed a brief opposing a lawsuit that seeks to expand psilocybin services access to homebound patients. Kentucky regulators will host a webinar for medical cannabis patients on Wednesday. The Virginia Cannabis Control Authority Board of Directors will meet on June 2. / LOCAL Pawtucket, Rhode Island firefighters who claimed in a lawsuit that they were improperly fired for off-duty marijuana use are being reinstated. / INTERNATIONAL South Africa’s deputy minister in the presidency visited a medical cannabis facility. / SCIENCE & HEALTH A review concluded that “CBD exerts antitumor effects through multi-target and multi-pathway mechanisms involving oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, endoplasmic reticulum stress, calcium homeostasis imbalance, and modulation of signaling networks.” / BUSINESS SHF Holdings, Inc., d/b/a Safe Harbor Financial reported quarterly revenue of $2 million and a net loss of $1.8 million. TerrAscend erroneously received more than $8 million in tax refunds, federal officials said in a lawsuit. FundCanna secured a new senior credit facility of up to $60 million. / CULTURE Football player Rashee Rice has been ordered to spend 30 days in jail for violating probation by testing positive for cannabis. Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan. The post Virginia cannabis sales bill vetoed by governor (Newsletter: May 20, 2026) appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net -
Top 5 Most Exciting Things to Look Forward to at the Missouri Cannabis Business Conference (MOCANN BIZCON) this August
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Virginia’s governor has vetoed legislation to legalize recreational marijuana sales after lawmakers rejected her proposed amendments to the proposal. Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D) killed the reform bills on Tuesday, days after signing separate legislation to provide resentencing relief for people with past cannabis convictions. “I share the General Assembly’s goal of establishing a safe, legal, and well-regulated cannabis retail marketplace in the Commonwealth,” the governor said. “Virginians deserve a system that replaces the illicit cannabis market with one that prioritizes our children’s health and safety, public safety, product integrity, and accountability.” “As Virginia pursues a legal retail market, it is critical that we incorporate lessons learned by other states and ensure that our regulatory framework is fully prepared to provide strong oversight from day one,” she said. “That includes clear enforcement authority and sufficient resources for compliance, testing, and inspections, and robust tools to crack down on bad actors who continue to profit from the illicit market.” “I greatly appreciate the patrons’ time crafting this important piece of legislation as well as our continued dialogue and collaboration to strengthen this framework ahead of the next legislative session. I remain committed to working with members of the General Assembly, stakeholders, and law enforcement to get this right.” Lawmakers passed the cannabis sales bills in March, but the governor then suggested changes to the legalization proposal—including delaying the start date for sales by six months, increasing taxes and instituting new criminal penalties for cannabis consumers. The legislature last month declined to take up the amendments during a one-day reconvened session, however, effectively rejecting them. Sen. Lashrecse Aird (D), who sponsored the Senate version of the now-vetoed marijuana commerce bill, said on Tuesday that “once again, Virginia’s efforts to establish a safe, regulated and equitable adult-use cannabis marketplace has been halted despite years of work, public input and broad recognition that the status quo is failing Virginians.” Personal marijuana possession and home cultivation of marijuana has been legal in Virginia since 2021, but then-Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) twice vetoed bills to provide consumers with a way to legally purchase regulated adult-use cannabis. “The governor’s decision leaves the commonwealth exactly where we have been since 2021: with an unchecked illicit market, hurting our communities, harming our youth and putting adults at risk,” Aird said of Spanberger’s move. “Virginians deserve better than continued inaction veiled behind excuses about getting it right.” Del. Paul Krizek (D), sponsor of the House version of the marijuana sales bill, said it was “the product of years of policy development, stakeholder engagement and extensive deliberation through the Joint Commission to Oversee the Transition of the Commonwealth into a Cannabis Retail Market, reflecting a balanced and thoughtful approach shaped by the very people who will be impacted by and responsible for implementing it.” “Five years ago, Virginia legalized cannabis in recognition that the War on Drugs has caused disproportionate harm to Black families and communities,” he said. “The question now is whether Virginia will continue allowing an unregulated illegal market to thrive, or finally establish a safe, transparent system that protects consumers, keeps products away from children, and keeps our commitment to ending racially discriminatory marijuana policing in Virginia.” This veto and its consequences belong to the Governor and the Governor alone. Delegate @KrizekForVA and I release the following statement as our historic legislation HB642/SB542 establishing a regulated adult-use cannabis retail market in Virginia was vetoed: pic.twitter.com/DBZqVNBxzE — Senator Lashrecse Aird (@lashrecseaird) May 19, 2026 The senator and delegate added in a joint statement: “The governor’s veto ignores the reality that cannabis is already being sold everyday across Virginia. The only question is whether we as leaders will finally ensure those sales occur within a legal, regulated market or continue turning a blind eye to a booming illicit market while pretending to be outraged by its existence. The General Assembly provided Virginia with an opportunity to lead on this issue, but instead this veto prolongs uncertainty and provides comfort to those profiting from the illicit market. This veto and its consequences belong to the governor and governor alone.” Aird and Krizek had urged colleagues to vote against the governor’s amendments last month—even if that meant risking a veto from Spanberger when the legislation returned to her desk, which has now occurred. Lawmakers will now have to start the push for reform over again with new bills in the 2027 session. Spanberger, for her part, responded to earlier criticism of her cannabis amendments from the bill sponsors and advocates by saying the suggested changes came after she spoke to the leaders of other states that have already implemented adult-use marijuana markets. Here are the other key details of the cannabis bills—SB 542 and HB 642—as approved by lawmakers and with the governor’s suggested amendments: Lawmakers voted to allow adults to be able to purchase up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana in a single transaction, or up to an equivalent amount of other cannabis products as determined by regulators. That would represent an increase from the limit in current law of 1 ounce. The governor, however, wanted the amount increased to only 2 ounces. Under the legislature’s plan, legal sales could begin on January 1, 2027, but the governor proposed to push that back to July 1, 2027. Lawmakers voted to impose an excise tax of 6 percent on cannabis sales as well as a 5.3 percent retail sales and use tax, while allowing municipalities to set an additional local tax of up to 3.5 percent. The governor’s plan was largely the same, though it would have increased the excise tax to 8 percent starting on July 1, 2029. Under the legislation as approved by lawmakers, revenue would have been distributed to the Cannabis Equity Reinvestment Fund (30 percent), early childhood education (40 percent), the Department of Behavioral & Developmental Health Services (25 percent) and public health initiatives (5 percent). The governor, however, wanted to put all revenue into the general fund while earmarking it “for purposes such as early childhood education, behavioral health, public health awareness, prevention, treatment, and recovery services, workforce development, reentry, indigent criminal defense, and targeted reinvestment in historically disadvantaged communities.” The Virginia Cannabis Control Authority would have overseen licensing and regulation of the new industry, and would have also taken on oversight of hemp, which is currently under the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Local governments could not have opted out of allowing marijuana businesses to operate in their area. Delivery services would have been allowed. Serving sizes would have been capped at 10 milligrams THC, with no more than 100 mg THC per package. The governor proposed to make public marijuana use a class 4 criminal misdemeanor instead of civil violation punishable by a $25 fine as under current law. She also wanted to make possessing cannabis by people under the age of 21 a class 1 misdemeanor, punishable with a mandatory minimum fine of $500 or 50 hours of community service, as well as the suspension of drivers licenses for at least six months. Illegally selling or distributing 50 pounds or more of marijuana would have been a class 2 felony punishable by life in prison. The governor sought to eliminate support for the Cannabis Equity Reinvestment Fund. Existing medical cannabis operators could have entered the adult-use market if they pay a licensing conversion fee that is set at $10 million. Cannabis businesses would have had to establish labor peace agreements with workers. As passed by lawmakers, the bill would have directed a legislative commission to study adding on-site consumption licenses and microbusiness cannabis event permits that would allow licensees to conduct sales at venues like farmers markets or pop-up locations, but the governor is proposing to remove that language. JM Pedini, development director for the advocacy group NORML and executive director for Virginia NORML, said the governor action is “a profound disappointment to the many Virginia voters who believed her when she said on the campaign trail that she supported establishing a regulated adult-use cannabis market.” “It is also a slap in the face to the years of serious work undertaken by lawmakers, policy experts, advocates, public health stakeholders and regulators who spent more than half a decade researching, debating and carefully crafting this legislation,” Pedini told Marijuana Moment. “Rather than build upon that work, the governor dismissed it in favor of out-of-touch proposals to recriminalize cannabis consumers that lawmakers rightly rejected.” “Now, instead of finally taking marijuana out of smoke shops and placing it behind an age-verified counter, Virginia is once again being forced to tolerate another yet year of dangerous illicit market activity in every corner of the Commonwealth. Just as under Glenn Youngkin, unlicensed and predatory operators will continue to profit while public health and safety are left unprotected.” Chelsea Higgs Wise, executive director of Marijuana Justice, noted that “for five years, Virginia has been stuck in a limbo where adults can legally possess, share and grow cannabis, but there is still no regulated way to purchase it.” “By rejecting the retail bill, the governor has chosen to extend that chaos rather than move us toward a transparent, accountable retail system that centers public health, public safety and justice,” she said. “We are deeply concerned that instead of focusing on repair and relief, the administration has signaled a willingness to introduce new penalties and harsher enforcement in future proposals,” Wise said. “Adding more punishment to an already unjust landscape does not make our families, children or communities safer. It only widens the gap between those who are penalized and those who profit. These choices also carry a real price tag: every new offense and prosecution drives up system costs, drains taxpayer dollars and pulls law enforcement away from real public safety needs.” A coalition of cannabis reform organizations sent the governor a letter this month urging her not to veto the sales legalization legislation even though her amendments were rejected. “Together, these bills address the real issues surrounding cannabis in the Commonwealth today: an already-existing, unregulated marijuana market operating openly across the state while consumers, communities, and law enforcement are left without the protections of a legal framework,” the groups wrote. “Let’s be clear: these bills do not create a marijuana market in Virginia. That market already exists,” the letter said. “What these bills do is replace today’s predatory and unaccountable illicit operators with a regulated marketplace, enforceable rules, oversight, product safeguards, age verification, and the strict consumer safety standards already in use for Virginia medical cannabis.” The letter was signed by Virginia NORML, Marijuana Justice, Virginia Cannabis Association, Marijuana Policy Project and other groups. Meanwhile, the governor signed several other reform bills last month—including measures to protect the parental rights of marijuana consumers and allow patients to access medical cannabis in hospitals. The post Virginia Governor Vetoes Marijuana Sales Legalization Bill After Lawmakers Rejected Her Amendments appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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States that legalize medical or recreational marijuana see “significant reductions” in opioid overdoses among adults with employer-sponsored health insurance—indicating that a “substitution” effect may be at play—according to a new federally funded study. While numerous studies have linked state-level legalization to reduced opioid deaths, researchers at the University of Kentucky’s College of Public Health said their data is the first of its kind to identify an association between cannabis access and non-fatal opioid poisonings. The study, published in the journal Preventive Medicine Reports, analyzed claims data on 107.5 million commercially insured adults aged 18-64 from all 50 states and Washington, D.C. from 2011 to 2021. Medical marijuana dispensaries and adult-use cannabis legalization was associated with “significant reductions in non-fatal opioid poisonings in the employer-sponsored insured population, particularly among male and younger populations,” the study authors found. Specifically, access to medical cannabis dispensaries (MCDs) and recreational cannabis laws (RCLs) were associated with a 15.47 percent and 11.92 percent reduction in non-fatal opioid overdoses per 100,000 enrollees per quarter, respectively. “The reductions tied to medical dispensaries were significant for both men and women, and especially notable among younger adults ages 18–34, who saw a 23.27 percent reduction,” the researchers found. “These findings suggest that expanded access to cannabis through MCD and RCL is associated with lower [non-fatal opioid overdoses among] adults with employer-sponsored insurance,” the study said. “Greater cannabis access through MCDs and RCL may reduce [overdoses] in heavily impacted populations, indicating possible substitution of cannabis for opioids.” Though this speaks to an increasing common theme in cannabis research as it relates to opioid use, this is “the first study to our knowledge, to examine and find a negative association of MCD and RCL with [non-fatal opioid overdoses] in adults with employer-sponsored insurance,” the authors said. “Findings support continuing evidence-based opioid use disorder treatments, while policymakers treat legalization as complementary and prioritize harm reduction and treatment expansion,” it concludes. The research was funded through a grant from the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). The specific data might be novel, but the takeaway is consistent with a growing body of scientific literature on the broader topic. For example, another research study found that, as opioids continue to drive overdose deaths, making medical cannabis available and affordable seems to help patients reduce their use of the prescription painkillers. That research came on the heels of a recent study showing that using medical marijuana appears to help people reduce the use of other medications, including opioids, sleeping aids and antidepressants. They also experience far fewer negative side effects after switching to cannabis from prescription drugs, the study involving more than 3,500 patients found. — 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. — It also comes after President Donald Trump said marijuana can “make people feel much better” and serve as a “substitute for addictive and potentially lethal opioid painkillers.” Last month, the Trump administration announced it is moving ahead with the federal reclassification of marijuana by moving state-legal medical cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). About one in three Americans who use CBD say they take it as an alternative or supplement to at least one medication—particularly painkillers—according to a federally funded study published in February. Similarly, another recent federally funded study, published by the American Medical Association (AMA), added more evidence that marijuana can serve as an effective substitute for opioids in chronic pain treatment. Other AMA-published research has found that legalizing marijuana for medical or recreational purposes is “significantly associated with reduced opioid use among patients diagnosed with cancer.” A separate paper published in October similarly found that medical marijuana legalization is “associated with significant reductions in opioid prescribing.” In August, meanwhile, Australian researchers published a study showing that marijuana can serve as an effective substitute for opioids in pain management treatment. Another study published last year in the journal Drug and Alcohol Review found that, among drug users who experience chronic pain, daily cannabis use was linked to a higher likelihood of quitting the use of opioids—especially among men. Other research also found that legalizing medical cannabis appeared to significantly reduce monetary payments from opioid manufacturers to doctors who specialize in pain, with authors finding “evidence that this decrease is due to medical marijuana becoming available as a substitute” for prescription painkillers. Other recent research also showed a decline in fatal opioid overdoses in jurisdictions where marijuana was legalized for adults. That study found a “consistent negative relationship” between legalization and fatal overdoses, with more significant effects in states that legalized cannabis earlier in the opioid crisis. Authors estimated that recreational marijuana legalization “is associated with a decrease of approximately 3.5 deaths per 100,000 individuals.” “Our findings suggest that broadening recreational marijuana access could help address the opioid epidemic,” that report said. “Previous research largely indicates that marijuana (primarily for medical use) can reduce opioid prescriptions, and we find it may also successfully reduce overdose deaths.” Another recently published report into prescription opioid use in Utah following the state’s legalization of medical marijuana found that the availability of legal cannabis both reduced opioid use by patients with chronic pain and helped drive down prescription overdose deaths statewide. Overall, results of the study indicated that “cannabis has a substantial role to play in pain management and the reduction of opioid use,” it said. The post Marijuana Legalization Is Linked To ‘Significant Reductions’ In Opioid Overdoses, Federally Funded Study Finds appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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Louisiana lawmakers have voted to send the governor a bill that threatens to send people to jail for up to one year if they smoke marijuana within 2,000 feet of a school property—including a college campus. The legislation from Rep. Gabe Firment (R) was passed by the Senate in a 23-10 vote on Monday after having cleared the Senate last month. It next heads to the desk of Gov. Jeff Landry (R), whose staff previously testified in favor of the measure at a committee hearing. HB 568 applies to people who violate drug laws “while smoking, vaping, or otherwise abusing such controlled dangerous substance while on any property used for school purposes by any school, within two thousand feet of any such property, or while on a school bus.” Firment previously told senators at a House committee hearing that his bill “strengthens enforcement of Louisiana drug-free school zone laws by creating a clear behavior-based offense, so that when someone is openly smoking or vaping illegal drug in the school zone, law enforcement can act and prosecutors can prove the case.” “For marijuana, the bill establishes a clear and consistent penalty—up to a year in jail and $1,000 fine, ensuring that violations in school zones result in real, enforceable consequences,” he said. Sen. Rick Edmonds (R) argued on the Senate floor ahead of Monday’s final vote that the bill “strengthens enforcement of Louisiana drug school zone law by adding a behavior-based trigger for violations and clarifying the penalty structure.” “The bill does not change what’s legal. It gives law enforcement a practical tool [and] ensures consistent consequences in school zones,” he said. Kevin Caldwell, Southeast legislative manager for the pro-legalization Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), said the group is “disappointed” that lawmakers passed the bill. “In almost all urban, as well as suburban, areas of the state this is a return to the failed policies of mass incarceration for cannabis,” he told Marijuana Moment. “Historically, data shows us these punitive penalties fall on the working poor and people of color. The arbitrary area, rarely if ever properly marked, is a geographic trap. The idea to make public consumption a felony is not based on reason and is not inline with the nature of the offense. The language is particularly vague for a felony charge.” “This flies in the face of polls that continue to show that the citizens of Louisiana want to see prohibition end, not ramp up enforcement,” Caldwell said. “This legislation was a priority of Governor Jeff Landry, who personally lobbied state representatives and senators to pass this legislation without any amendments. A major step backwards for Louisiana.” In 2021, then-Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) signed a bill decriminalizing marijuana by removing the threat of jail time for possessing up to 14 grams. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — Meanwhile, a Louisiana Senate bill to let patients with terminal and irreversible conditions use medical marijuana in hospitals is also advancing toward final passage. Separate legislation to create a psychedelic-assisted therapy pilot program, using opioid settlement dollars to fund clinical trials aimed at developing alternative treatments such as psilocybin and ibogaine is also being considered this session. A lawmaker recently filed a proposal that would create a new state task force to “study and develop findings and recommendations regarding the potential legalization of recreational marijuana.” Another lawmaker also introduced a bill to create an adult-use marijuana legalization pilot program in the state to determine whether the reform should eventually be expanded and permanently codified. Rep. Candace Newell (D)—who has long championed legislation to end cannabis criminalization and filed a similar legal marijuana pilot program measure last session—is sponsoring what’s titled the “Adult-Use Cannabis Pilot Program Regulation and Enforcement Act.” Getting the bill across the finish line could prove complicated in the conservative legislature, however. Newell’s earlier version of the pilot program legislation didn’t advance to enactment last year, and lawmakers that session also rejected other marijuana reform proposals such as one that would have established a tax system to prepare the eventual legalization of adult-use cannabis. The post Louisiana Bill To Jail People For Smoking Marijuana Near College Campuses Passes, Heading To Governor’s Desk appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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“One of the problems in being first, like Colorado was, into the legalizing of cannabis, is that you have to learn all the unintended consequences and unforeseen outcomes the hard way.” By Christopher Osher, Denver Gazette via ProPublica This story was originally published by ProPublica. A top regulator for Colorado’s Marijuana Enforcement Division acknowledged in a private meeting with industry representatives that the amount of chemically converted hemp being illegally sold as marijuana is far greater than the agency has publicly disclosed. The remarks confirmed testing by The Denver Gazette and ProPublica, which found signs of hemp in marijuana vapes sold at dispensaries, as well as reporting that regulators have discovered that some hemp-derived vapes were contaminated with a toxic chemical. The virtual meeting, an audio recording of which was reviewed by the news organizations, was convened by members of Colorado Leads, a marijuana industry trade group, in March to discuss a problem they said had “metastasized” and now posed an “existential threat” to the nation’s first legal recreational marijuana market. During the meeting, Kyle Lambert, the enforcement division’s deputy senior director, said the number of hemp-derived products is “larger than we can quantify.” He said the agency feared the prevalence of banned hemp was driving down the price of marijuana in the state and helping facilitate the diversion of high-grade marijuana out of Colorado and into the black market in other states. Describing anomalies in the system the state uses to track marijuana production and sales, Lambert told the industry players that the extent of suspicious transactions in the system “would probably explode your minds.” Two weeks after that meeting, the division sent a bulletin to the industry that it plans to crack down on companies that illegally sell cheaper and potentially hazardous hemp products as marijuana and that it would pursue emergency rules. But it hasn’t done so yet, and other reform efforts failed during this year’s legislative session. Despite the regulators’ concerns, Colorado lawmakers, who weren’t at the March briefing, abandoned a bill that would have let voters decide whether to overhaul how marijuana products are tested for contaminants. (The Denver Gazette and ProPublica investigation found that other states have adopted stronger safety measures.) Dominique Mendiola, the senior director of the Marijuana Enforcement Division, said in a statement that the agency has “consistently been proactive in pursuing the necessary rules, legislation and authority to combat this issue.” “Lambert was speaking frankly to highlight the scale and complexity of the problem, as nominal-dollar transactions do not amount to definitive evidence of non-compliance,” Mendiola said. She added that investigations into such transactions require extensive resources and can take significant time. The problem of companies substituting hemp for marijuana dates to 2018, when Congress legalized hemp, a close cousin of marijuana that has only trace amounts of THC, the psychoactive compound that makes people high. Federal lawmakers had hoped to support farmers while satisfying advocates who believe the high levels of the nonintoxicating compound CBD in hemp help with seizures, pain and sleep. But hemp manufacturers quickly figured out how to convert CBD in hemp into THC through a process that involves toxic solvents, creating products that sometimes contain harmful chemicals and that can be more potent than products made from marijuana. Colorado became one of the first states to ban that chemical conversion process and prohibit the sale of intoxicating hemp products to its residents. But manufacturers were allowed to produce hemp products for export to other states, and some companies continue to rely on hemp within Colorado because it is cheaper than using marijuana to make the honey-colored THC distillate that goes into vapes and edibles, industry insiders say. “This has become pervasive to where it’s, like, half the market,” said Jordan Wellington, a marijuana industry lobbyist and consultant, during the meeting with Lambert and a four-person investigative team that handles the agency’s most difficult cases. “We’re past Stage 1 cancer of it being, like, one spot. It’s fully metastasized.” He said “rampant” use of hemp and other illicit material was putting pressure on honest manufacturers to cut corners to survive. “It might be the most important and existential threat we’ve ever faced as an industry,” Wellington said. When the state legalized recreational marijuana in 2012, it promised to establish a “seed-to-sale” system to track marijuana from the initial planting to the purchase of pot, vapes and other products in dispensaries. Close tracking would prevent marijuana grown in Colorado from being diverted to states where it remained illegal, supporters promised. Tracking also was supposed to assure consumers that they were buying safe, quality products. But during the March video conference, Colorado regulators confided to industry lobbyists that the tool for rooting out fraud isn’t working. “There’s a lot of really crap data in there that is hard for us to proactively go take action on,” Lambert said of the tracking system. Extensive fraud in sales transaction reporting likely means the state has lost out on millions of dollars in marijuana excise tax revenue while businesses that follow the law have paid more than their fair share, industry insiders claim. Unprocessed marijuana typically can fetch more than $600 a pound on the open market, depending on the category, but manufacturers often report to the state’s tracking system unrealistic nominal sales, often as low as a penny or dollar a pound, Lambert said. When pressed by regulators, businesses typically defended those valuations, arguing that they had submitted placeholder numbers while they were still negotiating the price of products, Lambert said. The division, which employs 26 investigators to monitor roughly 2,100 marijuana businesses, doesn’t have the resources to investigate all cases adequately, he said. “We’d love to set up, you know, surveillance on places and track vehicles and see where they come from,” he said. “Did they come from a hemp plant? Did it come from here? Where did it go? We’re not resourced or equipped to do those types of investigations.” In April, state Sens. Kyle Mullica, D-Thornton, and Marc Snyder, D–Colorado Springs, introduced the Cannabis Consumer Protection Act, which would have placed a ballot measure before voters this fall to overhaul how marijuana products are tested for contaminants, bringing Colorado in line with other states. The ballot measure would have put private labs in charge of collecting marijuana samples for the testing required before products go to dispensaries. Currently, manufacturers can select their own samples. Regulators have caught companies gaming that system by substituting samples that were different from what they sold in stores or by treating the samples with chemicals. The act also would have shifted oversight of safety and testing from the Marijuana Enforcement Division to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and funded a program in which regulators would randomly collect marijuana products from dispensaries to test them for contaminants. But the legislation collapsed as different segments of the marijuana industry clashed over a provision tucked into the bill that would have increased taxes on products with higher amounts of THC. Manufacturers of highly concentrated THC products argued that the proposed potency tax would cut into their profits while lowering costs for manufacturers of edibles like gummies. Consumer safety groups also weren’t satisfied and wanted the bill to be tougher, pushing for a strict cap on potency like Vermont has. Ultimately, the main industry trade group opposed it, and Gov. Jared Polis, through a spokesperson, said he feared the bill would cause too much regulation. The bill died, though Snyder, the cosponsor of Senate Bill 26-161, said he plans to revisit the issue in the 2027 legislative session. Snyder said he had hoped to give regulators more tools to tackle fraud. “One of the problems in being first, like Colorado was, into the legalizing of cannabis,” he said, “is that you have to learn all the unintended consequences and unforeseen outcomes the hard way.” This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Denver Gazette. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories in your inbox every week. The post Colorado Marijuana Official Said Size Of State’s Illegal Hemp Market ‘Would Explode Your Minds’ In Leaked Meeting Recording appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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California officials are making additional reforms to help the state’s marijuana businesses take advantage of federal tax and other benefits under Trump administration’s rescheduling move. Specifically, the Department of Cannabis Control (DCC) on Monday proposed emergency regulations to let businesses with current licenses covering both medical and recreational marijuana secure a secondary license through a streamlined process to separate out the segments of their operations in light of the fact that the federal scheduling change currently only covers medical cannabis. Under DCC’s proposal, marijuana businesses would be able to “create a second, related entity and hold two distinct licenses (one adult-use and one medicinal) at the same premises” under the expedited regulations. “DCC is working on making this pathway available due to the timing and uncertainty of the federal process,” the department said. “Additional operational components—such as track and trace requirements, local authorization, tax collection, and other implementation matters—are still being evaluated and will be addressed through future guidance or rulemaking as needed.” The proposed rules come weeks after the Justice Department finalized a process moving medical cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). One of the more consequential policy impacts of that reform is that state-licensed medical cannabis businesses will be able to take federal tax deductions under an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) code known as 280E. Broader rescheduling of marijuana will be considered at a hearing starting next month. “Things are moving quickly, and we currently have limited information about how federal implementation will unfold,” DCC Director Clint Kellum said in a notice about the move, which marks an expansion of initial reforms the department announced just days after the rescheduling announcement last month. “We continue to request meetings with the federal offices leading this work, but so far, we have not received guidance beyond what is publicly available,” he said. “We recognize this creates uncertainty for our licensees, given the size and complex structure of our medicinal and adult-use markets. ” “Our immediate focus is creating a pathway for operators interested in exploring federal registration. This includes proposing emergency regulations to create a pathway for licensees authorized to engage in retail activities to create a second, related entity and hold two distinct licenses (one adult-use and one medicinal) at the same premises.” DCC added that, in order to “maintain the integrity of the existing licensing system, certain conditions will be placed on any new licenses issued under this process to ensure that the resulting medical cannabis businesses continue to comply with all existing requirements.” Public comments on the emergency rules must be submitted to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL), with DCC copied, between May 27-31. In its prior rescheduling-related update, DCC announced that cultivation licensees “no longer need to wait until renewal to request a change to their adult-use (A) or medicinal-use (M) designation.” Additionally, DCC no longer requires a new local authorization for requests that change a license to medical designation only or add a medical designation to an existing adult-use designation. — 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. — In order to take advantage of legal benefits in line with the move to Schedule III, state-licensed medical cannabis businesses must register on DEA’s website. A currently available form covers dispensaries, and the agency recently announced that additional forms for marijuana manufacturing, distribution and testing businesses will soon be posted. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) said they plan to issue new tax guidance for the marijuana industry following the rescheduling announcement. Back in California, state lawmakers are advancing legislation this session to allow marijuana retailers to offer drive-thru windows to serve customers. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), meanwhile, recently took credit for helping to lead the push for the state to legalize marijuana and discussed his own limited experience with using cannabis. In October, however, Newsom vetoed a bill that would have allowed certain marijuana microbusinesses to ship medical cannabis products directly to patients via common carriers like FedEx and UPS, stating that the proposal “would be burdensome and overly complex to administer.” Newsom did sign a bill earlier that month aimed at streamlining research on marijuana and psychedelics. In September, the governor also signed a measure into law to put a pause on a recently enacted tax hike on marijuana products. California officials recently awarded nearly $30 million in grants for marijuana-focused academic research projects. Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images. The post New California Emergency Marijuana Rules Aim To Help State’s Businesses Benefit From Trump’s Federal Rescheduling Move appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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New BIPOC Collective Seeks To Shift Psilocybin Therapy Movement Towards Inclusion
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Even as the Trump administration recently finalized a medical marijuana rescheduling rule—and the president has pushed to maintain the legal status for full-spectrum CBD—the U.S. Army is making clear that it views all forms of cannabis and its derivatives as dangerous drugs that soldiers are banned from using. In a blog post on Thursday, officials with Army’s Directorate of Prevention, Resilience and Readiness reiterated the military branch’s position that even CBD products such as infused creams and gummies “can pose serious risks to Soldiers and mission readiness.” While CBD is “often perceived as a non-intoxicating alternative to marijuana,” Army policy stipulates that the cannabinoid is “not permitted.” All forms of cannabis—including marijuana, hemp and “all cannabinoid-containing products”—are banned under Army Regulation 600-85 “regardless of how they are marketed or consumed,” the article cautioned. States that permit the use of marijuana or hemp don’t change that policy, either. Col. Kevin Goke, deputy director at the Army Directorate of Prevention, Resilience and Readiness, said the Department of War’s (formerly known as the Department of Defense) policy “keeps the Army community healthy and workplaces drug-free.” “Soldiers are able to perform their duties to the fullest extent while maintaining the high standards required to defend the nation,” he said Andrea Donoghue, program manager for the Army Substance Abuse Program, added that the “relationship between hemp, marijuana and CBD can be confusing, sparking debate on lethality and legality.” But in all cases, the military branch maintains a blanket ban that comprises everything from hemp-derived CBD to natural delta-9 THC in marijuana to synthetic cannabinoids that are “designed to mimic THC.” Army has additionally expressed concern about the proliferation of intoxicating cannabinoids such as delta-8 THC that can be synthesized from hemp-derived CBD. “Even common hemp items containing CBD, such as vape juices, food, hair care products, oils, lotions and other cosmetics, are prohibited for Soldiers as they can lead to positive drug tests and jeopardize military careers. Additionally, products labeled as ‘THC-free’ are not always reliable, as they may be inaccurately labeled or lack consistent quality control.” “For Soldiers, the only safe and compliant path is to avoid these products entirely,” Donoghue said. The post on Army’s website goes on to say that “all types of cannabinoids can pose risks to both physical and mental readiness.” “Soldiers who use these products risk testing positive for THC and other banned substances,” it said, adding that positive drug tests for such drugs “can result in disciplinary action including loss of rank or loss of employment and benefits” under military code. “Regardless of state legality or commercial availability, the Army treats these products the same. This zero-tolerance approach protects Soldiers, maintains a drug-free force and ensures mission readiness,” Donoghue said. “The Army’s goal is to build a healthy, ready and resilient force, recognizing that peak performance comes from fitness, mental toughness, proper nutrition and responsible choices. This commitment ensures Soldiers are prepared to perform at their highest level and accomplish the mission.” Goke added that the “key takeaway for service members remains the significant risk posed by the unregulated consumer market, where THC contamination in commercial products is a documented and persistent problem.” “Therefore, until these products are regulated with the same rigor as pharmaceuticals, Army policy AR 600-85’s zero-tolerance stance remains absolute to protect our Soldiers’ careers and ensure mission readiness,” he said. Army officials concluded by stressing that “possession and use of cannabinoids, whether hemp-based or synthetic, is banned.” And while life in the military “can be challenging,” the use of cannabis or other drugs to relax, sleep or manage stress is a “sign to check in.” That could involve a participating in the Army’s substance misuse program, which is “available to help, not punish.” The branch’s reaffirmation of its cannabis-related code for soldiers comes just months after the Army updated guidance making it so recruits will no longer need to obtain a waiver to enlist if they have a single conviction for possessing marijuana or drug paraphernalia on their records. The updated regulations, which will also raise the maximum age for recruits from 35 to 42, are generally meant to expand eligibility opportunities for service in the military. And removing the marijuana waiver requirement for single possession offenses could significantly widen the candidate pool as laws around cannabis continue to evolve at the state and federal level. When it comes to drug policy around use for active duty servicemembers, however, Army has generally been consistent. In 2024, for example, Army specifically updated its drug policy to clarify that soldiers are prohibited from using intoxicating hemp cannabinoid products like delta-8 THC. It is further cautioned servicemembers against eating foods containing poppyseeds, which can produce false positives when testing for opioids. The military branch’s prior policy enacted in 2020 made clear that the “use of products made or derived from hemp,” even if it’s legal for civilians, is prohibited for soldiers. But that guidance came before delta-8 and other intoxicating cannabinoids became a mainstream feature of the largely unregulated cannabis market. Instead, the Army at the time focused on non-intoxicating CBD, which servicemembers are also barred from using. It remains the rule that prohibited cannabis products include those that are “injected, inhaled, or otherwise introduced into the human body; food products; transdermal patches, topical lotions and oils; soaps and shampoos; and other cosmetic products that are applied directly to the skin.” “This provision is punitive, and violations may be subject to punishment,” it says. The language of the earlier Army guidance seemed to apply to delta-8, even if it wasn’t explicitly mentioned, but the branch has since put the policy more clearly into writing. Meanwhile, in a notice distributed in 2024, the Army reminded military members that former President Joe Biden’s pardons for federal marijuana possession offenses didn’t apply to violations of military drug policies. Ever-shifting marijuana policies have prompted multiple military branches to clarify or adjust their own drug policies. For example, amid the military’s ongoing recruiting crisis, the Navy in 2024 announced that it was expanding authority to grant waivers to recruits who arrive at boot camp and initially test positive for marijuana, instead of simply sending them home. The change came shortly after a similar one was enacted at the Air Force, which reported in 2023 that it granted more than three times as many enlistment waivers to recruits who tested positive for THC as officials anticipated when they first expanded the waiver program in 2022. For the Air Force in particular, this waiver program represented a notable development, as the branch instituted a policy in 2019 barring service members from using even non-intoxicating CBD, even if its derived from hemp and is therefore federally legal under the 2018 farm bill. The Navy issued an initial notice in 2018 informing ranks that they’re barred from using CBD and hemp products no matter their legality. Then in 2020 it released an update explaining why it enacted the rule change. In 2022, the Naval War College warned sailors and marines about new hemp products on the market, issuing a notice that said members may test positive for marijuana if they drank a Rockstar energy drink that contained hemp seed oil. A Massachusetts base of the Air Force, meanwhile, released a notice in 2021 stating that service members can’t even bring hemp-infused products like shampoos, lotions and lip balms to the base. “Even if it’s for your pet, it’s still illegal,” the notice said. Officials with the division also said in 2018 that it wants its members to be extra careful around “grandma’s miracle sticky buns” that might contain marijuana. The Coast Guard has said sailors can’t use marijuana or visit state-legal dispensaries. In 2023, the Department of Defense (DOD) said that marijuana’s active ingredient delta-9 THC is the most common substance that appears on positive drug tests for active duty military service members. The second most common is delta-8 THC, which is found in a growing number of hemp-derived products that are being made available, including in states where marijuana itself remains illegal. One of the first attempts by the U.S. military to communicate its cannabis ban came in the form of a fake press conference in 2019, where officials took scripted questions that touched on hypotheticals like the eating cannabis-infused burritos and washing cats with CBD shampoos. That was staged around the time that DOD codified its rules around the non-intoxicating cannabinoid. In 2024, a study found that 6 in 10 military veterans support marijuana legalization generally, while an earlier survey found more than 72 percent support among veterans for U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) doctors being able to legally recommend marijuana. The post Army Reminds Soldiers Of ‘Zero-Tolerance’ Marijuana Policy, Warning That Even CBD Lotion Remains Banned appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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Marijuana Moment: Feds warn truck drivers about cannabis use after rescheduling (Newsletter: May 19, 2026)
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New congressional bill on marijuana-impaired driving standards; IN gov pushes lawmakers on medical cannabis; Study: Cannabinoids tied to weight loss Subscribe to receive Marijuana Moment’s newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. It’s the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible… Your good deed for the day: donate to an independent publisher like Marijuana Moment and ensure that as many voters as possible have access to the most in-depth cannabis reporting out there. Support our work at https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment / TOP THINGS TO KNOW The Department of Transportation published guidance saying that truck drivers, pilots and other safety-sensitive workers still cannot use medical cannabis without punishment despite the Trump administration’s rescheduling move. “Marijuana use is not compatible with safety-sensitive functions.” House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Sam Graves (R-MO) and Ranking Member Rick Larsen (D-WA) released the text of legislation that would require federal officials to study the issue of driving under the influence of marijuana and other drugs and propose “evidence-based impairment standards.” Indiana Gov. Mike Braun (R) said he hopes opposition to legalizing medical cannabis among legislative leaders “softens”—pointing to its benefits for military veterans when “there’s nothing else that seems to work” and noting that the state is “surrounded” by others that have already legalized. A new federally funded study found that “chronic cannabinoid exposure, particularly with cannabis extract, reduces body weight, improves glucose homeostasis and normalizes adipose tissue function in a mouse model of” diet-induced obesity. “THC and cannabis extract robustly reduced body weight and visceral adiposity in [diet-induced obesity] mice.” A broad coalition of organizations joined together to press Congress for federal marijuana legalization and comprehensive reforms to build on the Trump administration’s partial rescheduling of cannabis. / FEDERAL Customs and Border Protection included marijuana seizures in statistics about what it called “drug interdictions that save lives.” Rep. Brian Mast (R-FL) posted a video of himself discussing his House-passed veterans medical cannabis amendment. Rep. Greg Stanton (D-AZ) reported a sale of Trulieve stock valued between $15,001 and $50,000 this month. Rep. James Comer (R-KY) posted photos of himself touring a hemp business, saying he “discussed federal legislation I’m working on to try to save the hemp industry from unintended consequences of a prior Senate bill.” / STATES Minnesota lawmakers sent Gov. Tim Walz (D) legislation to revise various cannabis industry rules and require regulators to issue recommendations on creating a psilocybin therapy program. A Colorado senator withdrew his bill to create a licensing system for pop-up events that allow cannabis use. Illinois regulators adopted rules on cannabis plant monitoring and fees. New Jersey regulators discussed marijuana product testing, market expansion and labor issues. The Nevada Cannabis Compliance Board will meet on Thursday. — 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. — / SCIENCE & HEALTH A case report concluded that “clinical application of a broad-spectrum Cannabis oil rich in CBD may represent a promising therapeutic alternative for cats affected by feline gingivostomatitis.” / ADVOCACY, OPINION & ANALYSIS The chair of the Indiana Democratic Party, a former state senator who sponsored marijuana reform bills during her time in the legislature, said it is “a little bit amusing” that some Republicans are starting to warm up to medical cannabis now. / BUSINESS The Food and Drug Administration granted breakthrough therapy status to VERTANICAL’s full-spectrum cannabis extract to treat chronic low back pain. Glass House Brands Inc. filed a prospectus supplement to its at-the-market distribution program through which it can sell up to $50 million worth of equity shares. The Global Cannabis Network Collective and Whitney Economics on pricing compression in the marijuana market. Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images. The post Feds warn truck drivers about cannabis use after rescheduling (Newsletter: May 19, 2026) appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net -
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“Cannabis reform is the most popular issue in American politics, and…it’s on Congress to pass a comprehensive legalization bill that centers the release of cannabis prisoners.” By Jack Gorsline, Filter A national coalition of 41 advocacy groups converged on Capitol Hill for the Cannabis Week of Unity, when a coordinated lobbying blitz pressed a gridlocked Congress to act on federal marijuana descheduling, criminal-legal reform and equitable access. The mobilization, which ran from May 12-14, brought together labor unions, veterans, civil liberties advocates, legal experts, industry executives and directly impacted individuals around three core demands: federally legalizing cannabis, releasing federal cannabis prisoners and expunging records to restore civil rights. The coalition spent three days navigating the halls of both congressional chambers to pitch a comprehensive package of 13 separate hemp and cannabis reform bills. The legislative push comes at a critical juncture. While an overwhelming majority of states have legalized medical or adult-use cannabis in some form, and the Trump administration last month rescheduled state-legal medical marijuana, federal law otherwise continues to classify the plant as a Schedule I controlled substance—creating a legal and economic paradox that advocates say can no longer be ignored. Central to the coalition’s push is the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act, introduced as HR 5068. If passed, the MORE Act would completely remove cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act, effectively ending nearly a century of federal prohibition. The bill’s provisions extend far beyond simple descheduling. It aims to eliminate all federal criminal penalties for marijuana activity, establish clear pathways for expungement and resentencing, and create community reinvestment from federal cannabis tax revenues. The bill also contains equity measures designed to lower barriers to entry for small, independent businesses attempting to navigate the highly capitalized legal market. “Cannabis reform is the most popular issue in American politics, and now that the president has signaled he is open to reform, it’s on Congress to pass a comprehensive legalization bill that centers the release of cannabis prisoners who should no longer be incarcerated,” Jason Ortiz, director of strategic initiatives for the Last Prisoner Project and cofounder of the Latino Cannabis Alliance, told Filter. Ortiz emphasized that administrative gestures must be backed by concrete statutory moves. “LPP stands ready to work with the Cannabis Caucus co-chairs and the Cannabis Unity Coalition to pass a full descheduling bill like the MORE Act,” he continued, “to finally end the nightmare that has been cannabis prohibition, and create a path for everyone incarcerated for cannabis crimes to rejoin their families and become full members of society.” A driving theme of the Week of Unity was the disproportionate impact of federal prohibition on minority communities, specifically Latino populations. In a May 13 press conference outside the Senate wing of the Capitol, advocates drew a direct line from early 20th-century anti-immigrant rhetoric to modern-day deportation statistics. “Buenos dias. My name is Jessica Gonzalez. I am an Ecuadorian immigrant, an attorney and the president of the Latino Cannabis Alliance, a national coalition of Latino advocates, attorneys, organizers, researchers and storytellers fighting to move our communities from the margins of cannabis policy to the center of it,” Gonzalez told a crowd of reporters and lawmakers. “We are Harry Anslinger’s worst nightmare.” Anslinger, the first commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, weaponized anti-Latino and anti-Black prejudice in the 1930s to secure the initial federal restriction of cannabis. Gonzalez noted that the structural machinery built during that era continues to function with devastating efficiency. “We are here because Latinos are the largest immigrant group in the country, and the cannabis industry benefits tremendously from Latino consumers and workers while staying silent on the same policies that make participation for non-citizen Latinos dangerous,” Gonzalez said. “That is a contradiction we are here to say out loud. And here is a number we do not hear often enough: 70 percent. Over 70 percent of people sentenced federally for cannabis possession are classified as Hispanic. That is not a coincidence but the result of a system that fused cannabis prohibition and immigration enforcement into a deportation pipeline, and aimed it at our families.” For non-citizens, even legal residents, a federal conviction or disclosure of cannabis possession can trigger mandatory deportation without judicial discretion. Gonzalez stated that the Latino Cannabis Alliance refuses to let the economic boom of state-sanctioned cannabis eclipse the human cost of federal inaction. “But we have never been a people who accept the terms we are given,” Gonzalez said. “My family refused when they left everything they knew and built a life in a foreign country. Our communities refused when prohibition tried to turn our families into criminals and our neighborhoods into evidence. And today the Latino Cannabis Alliance refuses to let one more family be deported, one more worker be silenced or one more community be erased from a movement we have always belonged to.” She continued that, “decriminalization is the floor, not the ceiling. We will not forget the deported. We will not forget the detained. Our work spans borders, but it begins where this system was built. Prohibition began with a lie about our people. It will end with the truth from us.” Business leaders also described the injustice and inequity of the current landscape. “Cannabis Unity Week is not a celebration of victory—it is a call to action,” said Susie Plascencia, founder of Latinas in Cannabis and a representative for the National Hispanic Cannabis Council. “Thousands of people are still incarcerated for cannabis offenses, families are still living with the consequences of prohibition and Latino communities remain disproportionately harmed and underrepresented in this industry.” Today, Plascencia pointed out multi-state marijuana operators are generating billions of dollars on public stock exchanges, yet independent, minority-owned startups face severe capital constraints due to federal banking restrictions. “Latino entrepreneurs are among the fastest-growing in the country, building businesses despite systemic barriers,” she said, “but in cannabis, many still face limited access to capital, restrictive policies and exclusion from ownership. We are building in spite of it all, but we should not have to build alone. We are here to demand federal action … Because equity is not just about repairing harm—it’s about investing in the future.” The broader drug policy reform movement also lent its institutional weight to the coalition. “As MAPS celebrates its 40th anniversary, we’re proud to join the Cannabis Unity Coalition in advancing the movement for compassionate, evidence-based drug policy,” said gina vensel, community partnerships manager for the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS). “This milestone is an opportunity to reflect on the progress made in challenging the War on Drugs while recognizing the crucial work that still lies ahead, especially around restorative justice,” vensel told Filter. “Together, we strive to dismantle stigma, educate our communities and advocate for meaningful reform. The Cannabis Unity Coalition represents the power of collective action to drive lasting, positive change.” Beyond the comprehensive framework of the MORE Act, advocates spent time on the Hill educating lawmakers on a variety of narrower measures designed to solve immediate, practical problems. Among these is the STATES 2.0 Act (HR 2934), a bipartisan bill that would amend federal law to respect state-legal cannabis programs, shielding state-regulated businesses from federal interference and asset forfeiture. Advocates also pushed for the PREPARE Act (HR 2935 / S 3576), which would establish a federal commission tasked with designing a comprehensive regulatory framework for the eventual post-prohibition transition. To counter decades of politically motivated restrictions on scientific inquiry, the coalition also advocated for the Evidence-Based Drug Policy Act (HR 3082), to remove barriers that prevent the Office of National Drug Control Policy from conducting objective research on the societal impacts of cannabis legalization. The coalition additionally brought a heavy focus to “clean slate” initiatives, housing stability and agricultural guidelines. Key legislation on this front includes the Clean Slate Act, a bipartisan measure mandating the automatic sealing of certain federal records for nonviolent cannabis convictions, to help impacted people access employment and educational opportunities. Advocates are championing the Veterans Cannabis Use for Safe Healing Act and the Veterans Equal Access Act, too—complementary bills to prevent removal of Department of Veterans Affairs benefits if veterans participate in state-legal medical cannabis programs, and to allow VA physicians to recommend medical cannabis in states where it is legal. Another item on the coalition’s agenda is the Marijuana in Federally Assisted Housing Parity Act, to protect people in federally assisted housing from eviction or denial of residency based solely on state-compliant cannabis use. Finally, organizers are seeking hemp regulatory clarifications through a suite of agricultural bills. While the coalition faced an uphill battle given entrenched congressional leadership, several lawmakers emerged from their offices to signal solidarity. Following the press conference, Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN), spoke candidly with TMZ about shifting currents inside the Capitol. Omar noted that the immense financial drain of maintaining prohibition has fundamentally changed the conversation, making fiscal conservatives increasingly open to reform. “I will say, advocacy for legalizing doesn’t necessarily mean that you are a user, so everybody can be an advocate…because we understand that it is not OK for us to spend the billions of dollars we do now on incarcerating people for smoking a joint,” Omar said. Omar also suggested that policy positions on the Hill lag behind private reality. “I think there are a lot of people who smoke cannabis in Congress,” she said. As the three-day mobilization concluded, organizers expressed optimism, saying that the sheer breadth of the 41-group alliance forces lawmakers to view cannabis not as a boutique drug policy issue, but as a critical intersection of labor rights, immigration justice, veteran health care and economic equity, among other issues. Whether their unity can spur legislative movement in a highly polarized Congress remains to be seen, but advocates left Washington with a clear message: The floor of decriminalization has been established; the fight for the ceiling of full justice is underway. This article was originally published by Filter, an online magazine covering drug use, drug policy and human rights through a harm reduction lens. Follow Filter on Bluesky, X or Facebook, and sign up for its newsletter. The post Cannabis Advocacy Groups Push Congress For Legalization And Other Reforms Following Trump’s Rescheduling Move appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
