Tag: marijuana law

  • ‘We are going to push pause’ on Ohio marijuana legislation, says Republican lawmaker

    ‘We are going to push pause’ on Ohio marijuana legislation, says Republican lawmaker

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio lawmakers will likely go on summer break without making any changes to the state’s marijuana law, a Republican state representative said Tuesday.

    For the second week in a row, Ohio Senate Bill 56 was up for a possible vote out of the Ohio House Judiciary Committee, but both times the vote did not take place.

    Once the bill is voted out of committee, it can be brought to the House floor for a vote. The Senate passed the bill in February.

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    Last week, the bill was removed from the committee agenda and this week the committee meeting — which only had S.B. 56 on the agenda — was canceled.

    “We are going to push pause,” state Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, said when asked about the marijuana bill. “We’re going to take the summer and come back and potentially take another crack at it.”

    Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman, R-Lima, said the Senate raised more than a dozen issues related to S.B. 56 last week.

    “I just told my caucus, ‘We’re not going to just say, OK, because we’re so anxious to pass the marijuana bill, which I’d like to get it done, but we’re not going to give up House priorities to do that,’” he said last week.

    The lawmakers are currently working on the state’s two-year operating budget, which Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine must sign before July 1. The lawmakers will go on summer break after the budget is finished.

    S.B. 56 would reduce the THC levels in adult-use marijuana extracts from a maximum of 90% down to a maximum of 70%, limit the number of active dispensaries to 400 and prohibit smoking in most public places.

    It would keep Ohio’s home grow the same at a limit of six plants per person and 12 plants per residence. State Sen. Steve Huffman, R-Tipp City, introduced the bill in January and the bill originally would have limited Ohio’s home grow from 12 plants down to six.

    Ohioans passed a citizen-initiated law to legalize recreational marijuana in 2023 with 57% of the vote, and sales started in August 2024. Ohio lawmakers can change the law since it passed as a citizen initiative not a constitutional amendment.

    “The people of Ohio spoke very clearly on this issue,” said Ohio House Minority Leader Dani Isaacsohn, D-Cincinnati. “They knew what they were voting on, and they voted to pass adult-use cannabis recreationally here in the state of Ohio.”

    Intoxicating hemp products

    The House has made significant changes to S.B. 56, most notably adding regulations to intoxicating hemp products.

    As the bill currently stands, only a licensed marijuana dispensary would be able to sell intoxicating hemp products that have been tested and complied with packaging, labeling and advertising requirements.

    The Ohio Department of Commerce would regulate intoxicating hemp products and drinkable cannabinoid products. Grocery stores, carryout stores, bars, and restaurants would continue to be able to sell drinkable cannabinoid products.

    Isaacsohn agrees there should be regulations around intoxicating hemp products, but wants it to happen through a “clean bill.”

    “It is so tied up in trying to overturn the will of the voters,” he said. “If we had a clean bill to fairly regulate intoxicating hemp, we could have voted on it months ago, years ago. … There are so many common sense things that we agree on, and when the majority brings forward a clean bill, we would be happy to vote for it.”

     Flowers of hemp plants that contain less that 0.3 percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) the primary psychoactive substance in marijuana. (Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal. Republish photo only with original article.) 

    The 2018 Farm Bill says hemp can be grown legally if it contains less than 0.3% THC.

    State Rep. D.J. Swearingen, R-Huron, was planning on introducing amendments to the bill’s hemp provisions during Tuesday’s committee meeting, but that didn’t happen since the meeting was canceled.

    The American Republic Policy worked with Swearingen on the amendments which would have allowed licensed hemp companies in Ohio to continue to operate their retail stores and create a unified regulatory framework for hemp and marijuana products, said Dakota Sawyer of American Republic Policy.

    “The same regulations that would apply to marijuana under the Ohio administration code would apply to hemp products as well,” he said. “We are ensuring that we do not have state-sanctioned monopolies in the state of Ohio, that federally legal hemp products can be accessed through independent businesses, and that they would not be forced to go into dispensaries.”

    Sawyer said forcing hemp products into only dispensaries would eliminate market competition.

    “We want to ensure that there are options out for people, to ensure that they are able to purchase what they love, what they would want … and to ensure that we do not have state-sanctioned monopolies,” he said.

    State Rep. Jennifer Gross, R-West Chester, said 3,000 hemp businesses would close if S.B. 56 passes as it currently stands — with hemp products only being sold in dispensaries.

    “We need to reward the good actors,”  she said. “We need to ID check our hemp products when it is consumable. We also need to allow these businesses to stay open.”

    Wesley Bryant, company owner of 420 Craft Beverages in Cleveland, said he already does many of the things that are outlined in the proposed amendment.

    “Every square inch of my facility is fully covered by cameras,” he said. “We have a full track and traceability of everything that comes into my facility. We even go so far as to double check IDs. And my doors stay locked throughout the day. You have to be buzzed in order to enter the facility.”

    DeWine and various lawmakers have expressed safety concerns for children when it comes to hemp products, but Sawyer said the average age of an Ohio hemp customer is 40 years old.

    “It’s not geared towards children,” Sawyer said. “What some legislators have done is created this mystical boogeyman that says that all these hemp people are doing all these crazy things that are attracting minors. And essentially we’re saying, let’s punish the bad actors that are doing that, but let’s not punish the good guys for that.”

    But Adrienne Robbin, deputy executive director of Ohio Cannabis Coalition (OHCANN), said Ohio children are being put at risk by intoxicating hemp products.

    “It’s a sad day for all Ohioans that we’re going to continue to see these illicit products be sold in our state over the summer,” she said. “These products are being marketed to (children) specifically,” she said. “I think the hemp industry is really good at pulling a few good actors out and highlighting them, but the reality is, the majority of these products are illicit.”

    Sawyer said he would prefer to see the legislation as two separate bills — one with marijuana regulations and a separate one with hemp regulations.

    “Marijuana and hemp are totally separate in terms of the industry and products,” he said.

    Follow Capital Journal Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.


    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio GOP proposal seeks to change voter-passed marijuana law with higher tax, lower THC levels

    Ohio GOP proposal seeks to change voter-passed marijuana law with higher tax, lower THC levels

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    A Republican lawmaker is trying to reduce the amount of marijuana grown at home, lower the level of THC in recreational marijuana, increase the tax, and redirect the revenue from it.

    Ohio Sen. Steve Huffman, R-Tipp City, recently introduced Senate Bill 56 which would make several changes to the state’s marijuana laws.

    “This bill is about government efficiency, consumer and child safety, and maintaining access to voter-approved adult-use marijuana,” Huffman said in his sponsor testimony last week.

    Ohioans voters passed a citizen-initiated law to legalize recreational marijuana in 2023 and sales started in August 2024. Since it was passed as a citizen initiative, Ohio lawmakers have the ability to change the law.

    The state’s total recreational marijuana sales were $292,874,669 as of Jan. 25, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce Division of Cannabis Control.

    The bill would lower THC levels in adult-use marijuana extracts from a maximum of 90% to a maximum of 70% and merge the state’s medical and recreational marijuana programs under the Division of Cannabis Control.

    “Consolidating both programs under the Division will allow for consistent requirements regarding testing, packaging, labeling, and advertising, especially those related to protecting children,” Huffman said in his testimony. “It also provides for streamlined licensing standards and general compliance procedures, cutting down on bureaucracy, red tape, and government waste.”

    On the home grow side, the law currently allows 12 marijuana plants to be cultivated at a single residence, but the bill would cut that in half. Huffman said folks who are growing marijuana at home could be supplying the illicit market.

    “The people did vote for home grow,” Huffman said. “I think that this is an example that we’re trying to move it to a little bit more reasonable.”

    S.B. 56 would require marijuana to be transported in the trunk of a car when traveling and it specifies that marijuana is only allowed in a private residence.

    “Ohio has long established open container laws regarding alcohol in motor vehicles; common sense mandates a similar rule for adult-use and medical marijuana access in motor vehicles,” said Steve Barnett, the Carroll County Prosecuting Attorney and a current officer of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association.

    The bill would also up the tax on adult-use marijuana from 10% to 15%, cap the number of active dispensaries at 350, and funnel all revenue from the adult-use tax to the state general fund. There are currently 128 marijuana dispensaries in Ohio as of Friday, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce.

    The current tax revenue is divided up in multiple ways — 36% to the cannabis social equity and jobs fund, 36% to the host community cannabis fund, 25% to the substance abuse and addiction fund and 3% to the Division of Cannabis Control and Tax Commissioner Fund.

    Ohio Senators tried to pass a similar bill during the previous General Assembly, but it died in the House.

    “So we’re basically telling the voters … screw you,” said Sen. Bill DeMora, D-Columbus. “You don’t know what you’re talking about. You passed it with an overwhelming majority of the state, but we know better.”

    Huffman responded by saying he believes his bill corrects “some of the societal needs.”

    “I don’t want to sit at the ball game and the guy next to my nine-year-old kid is smoking marijuana,” he said. “I think that’s wrong. That’s what the voters voted for. …  I wouldn’t say we’re gutting everything. We’re trying to improve it.”

    There is currently nothing in the bill related to expungement, so DeMora asked about the possibility of adding expungement to the bill and Huffman sounded open to that possibility.

    “Through this committee process, we will certainly be open to any type of amendments to do something along that line,” Huffman said.

    Despite Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine pleas to lawmakers to regulate or ban delta-8 THC products, hemp is not included in the bill. There was a bill in the last General Assembly that would have banned the sale of intoxicating hemp, but the bill never made it out committee.

    However, Huffman hinted that a separate bill dealing with hemp will be introduced soon.

    “I find both of them to be very complex issues,” he said.

    Follow OCJ Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky.


    Megan Henry
    Megan Henry

    Megan Henry is a reporter for the Ohio Capital Journal and has spent the past five years reporting in Ohio on various topics including education, healthcare, business and crime. She previously worked at The Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA Today Network.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

    MORE FROM AUTHOR