Joint Marijuana Committee Approves Sweeping Rewrite Of Medical And Adult Use Laws

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The Joint Committee on Marijuana Policy today voted to advance, over objection and disapproval, a bill that repeals the 2012 Medical Marijuana law and 2016 Adult Use laws in Massachusetts...
United States Food, Drugs, Healthcare, Life Sciences

The Joint Committee on Marijuana Policy today voted to advance, over objection and disapproval, a bill that repeals the 2012 Medical Marijuana law and 2016 Adult Use laws in Massachusetts — both passed by referendum — in their entirety. Our summary of the major points can be viewed by clicking this link  House Bill Summary.

In its place, a House Bill sent out of committee imposes many changes including a 28% tax rate (up from 12%) on adult use licensees; takes regulatory control of the industry away from both DPH (medical) and the State Treasurer (adult use) in favor of an independent commission; increases the ability of municipalities to prohibit cannabis businesses by vote of elected officials; repeals the requirement that medical licensees be not-for-profit corporations; and imposes restrictive limitations on any overlap in investment sources, operational services, or management among different licensees. Please see a link to our more detailed summary above.

The Bill, while now referred out of the Joint Committee on Marijuana Policy with a favorable vote, was viewed skeptically by some members of the Committee who promised there will be amendments. Committee Co-Chair Sen. Patricia Jehlen panned the bill as a gift to black market operators and an insult to voters who approved much different language.

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