“The poisoning hemp does not require the necessary tests … and selling children in attractive packages.”
Megan Henry, by Ohio Capital Journal
Ohio Gov. Mike Dewine (r) has been an executive 90-day executive order for banning sale of crusemen poisoning products from next Tuesday.
Intoxizing kalamu products, elements that are not dispensed by the licensed marijuana, such as gas stations, smoke shops and CBD stores, among others. This ban includes drinks inhabited.
“I’m doing the action today … to get these products out of the streets and get rid of our shelves,” Dewine said on Wednesday at the press conference. “The poisoning hemp is dangerous and we need to better protect our children … that’s what we think to do that.”
The 90-day executive order ends on January 12, 2026, which is then legislators if you want to see more actions to the hemp intoxicating.
“I won’t tell you what to do, but we need to have a little control of this product,” Dewine said. “We can’t afford to do not legal people to sell to children.”
These stores that violate the executive store could be a fine of $ 500 per day on the shelves of hemp products per day.
The 2018 farm invoice says that Kalamua can be grown legally if less than 0.3 percent.
“After these laws, the chemists began the manipulative compounds in the legal halmid plant, including these compounds intoxikers, including Delta-8 and Delta-9,” DeWine said “It’s completely different product”.
Marijuana is not a hemp intoxicating product and is legal at Ohio.
Dewine has called legislators to regulate or prohibit delta-8 products since January 2024. He said before he could not sign the executive command about the hemp.
“We think we have authority to do this, and I will not sit and I will not,” Dewine explained how he returned to his lawyers.
It was previously reported by an Ohio Kalamu product regulations with 20 states, according to Ohio State University Drug Implementing and Policy Center studies in November 2024.
In January 2024, he reported at least 257 Delta-8’s intoxications in recent years, according to children under 102 and under 40, according to Ohio Poison Control Center.
“Hemp Products Intoxicating, such as Delta-8, has risen significantly to the unexpected number of reasons among children,” Dr. Hannah Hays, General Manager of Ohio Poison Central and toxic toxic toxic.
Children who swallow intoxicating hemp products can be severity, hallucination, confusion, loss of consciousness, seizures and respiratory failure, Hays said.
“I don’t want to sell the product to children,” Dewine said. “I think the risk of our children is clear, and today I am taking action to protect children from Ohio. These kids are now weak in the presence of candy products for sale in Ohio State.”
DeWine had three products from Hourlytrically, at the Wednesday press conference, Stoner Patch Dummies (similar to Patch Sour Bears), Nerds Gummy Cluster), and infused gums similar to).
“With the poisoning hemp, this product does not have any restrictions where it can be sold or who can buy,” Dewine said. “The poisoning hemp does not require necessary tests … and selling in packages attracted to children, often imitates the containers of common candy.”
Nerdy Bear Gummy Bear has more than 100 milligrams thc, depending on the vessels.
“For context, adult products will be 10 milligrams per serving,” Dewine said. “It’s certainly easy to see how a child will mix this product with real candy and eat some warriors and ask hospitalization.”
Ohio cannabis coalition praised Dewine’s executive order.
“For a long time, the Hemp Industry has heard the farm invoice to align the health damage to Ohio’s health,” Ohcann David Executive Director of Executive Director. “To date, without regaining synthetic synthetic synthetic zucchini, consumers, especially children, jeopardizing.”
The hemp industry, however, spoke quickly against Dewine’s executive order.
“Thanks to the Executive DeWine Commission, Ohio will lose access to safe and legal products and Michael Tindall’s executive director said to small businesses of Ohio.
He said there are more than 2,000 smoke and hemp shops, and there are more than 4,000 outlets throughout Ohio, who sell hemp products.
Dewine’s command is “wrong abuse”, “Jonathan Miller said, the general advice of the US hemp-table.
“We are futraud to avoid the governor who is trying to avoid the legislature of Ohio and avoid corrective powers in crushing the state hemp industry, to kill the work,” Miller said in a statement. “Instead of the ban, Ohio should follow the limits of minor age, promising independent third-party tests, requiring detailed labeling and ensuring products with American hemp.”
The American Republic Politics Dakota Sawyer agrees that hemp products should not be in children, but Dewin said they agree with the approach to prohibiting all products.
“We should go after the bad actors, but don’t punish good actors,” he said. “This executive order will be turned down (good actors) down. This will leave them out of business. People will not be able to put food on their plates for families.”
State Republic. Tex Fischer, R-Boardman, said the executive promise is supervising.
“I think the legislature work is legislative,” he said. “I don’t think it’s legalizing the governor’s job.”
Intoxication of hemp bills
There is a handful Invoices in the legislature that would regulate hemp intoxication Products in different ways.
Ohio Senate Bill 266 The sale of hemp products would prohibit people under the age of 21. Marijuana is to prohibit sale of hemp products that have not been tested in the same rules and prevent children with attractive hemp products.
Ohio Senate 86 bill Sales of Kalamu products would prohibit prohibit under the age of 21, imposing 10% tax to hemp products and Regulate cannabinoid products.
The invoice would require crusher products to sell adult use only in marijuana dispensaries, in CBD stores, comfort stores, smoking stores or gas stations instead of selling. Kalamu products would require intoxicating products if products are tested and packaged, labeling and complying with advertising standards.
Ohio Senate 56 bill The marijuana dispensary would allow only to sell package, labeling and advertising requirements. This year the invoice passed in the Senate would also change parts of the State Marijuana law.
Ohio House bill 160 mostly treats Potential changes in state marijuana lawsBut it is also a intoxicating Hamp supply, each Thc product can only be sold in the Dispensaries of the Regulated Marijuana of Ohio.
This entry was published by Ohio Capital Journal for the first time.