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“That’s what we’re up against here”

Representatives of the state of Massachusetts officially confirmed that Mr initiative to repeal the law legalizing marijuana in this state will appear on the ballot in November.

The Commonwealth Secretary’s Elections Division told organizers Thursday that they had submitted enough valid signatures during the second round of petitions to put the measure before voters, but just barely.

According to state law, election campaigns in Massachusetts must submit signatures in two waves. After the first filing, the Legislature gets a chance to enact proposed ballot measures after organizers file the first round of petitions. Lawmakers in May refused to take measures to combat marijuanahowever, that’s why organizers needed to submit an additional 12,429 verified signatures by July 1 in order to hold the November vote.

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CSA

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The case will be heard from June 29 to July 15

The Drug Enforcement Administration is beginning hearings on a proposal to reclassify recreational cannabis under federal drug law. DEA medical cannabis has been transferred in FDA-approved drugs and from state-licensed operators in April, marking the most significant change in US cannabis policy in half a century.

The DEA hearing, scheduled for June 29-July 15, is to consider the agency’s May 21 proposal to move hemp from Schedule I of the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA) to Schedule III. Such a step would have a significant impact on a regulated adult cannabis industry that would be exempt from punitive tax policies for businesses that sell Schedule I drugs.

Cannabis reform advocates fear exclusion from hearings

Because transfer proposal established by the DEA, the agency will act as an advocate for reform through hearings. As a result, only individuals and groups opposed to relocation will be allowed to testify, which has made many cannabis reform advocates skeptical of the process.

The National Marijuana Law Reform Organization attempted to testify at the hearing arguing that hemp should be excluded from the CSA entirely.

“Marijuana cannot legally remain in Schedule I,” said Joseph A. Bondi, chairman of NORML’s board of directors. statement from the Cannabis Policy Reform Advocacy Group. “But Schedule III is not the end of the road. It is, at most, an interim fix. It does not address the federal government’s failure to recognize legal cannabis users of legal age under state law.”

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Pillen did not make a statement about his approval of the rules

Nebraska’s medical cannabis regulations will become a permanent part of the state’s regulatory code on Monday, five days after Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen gave final approval.

Pillen announced Wednesday that he had signed proposed rulebook from Nebraska Medical Commission on Cannabis. Under state law, the ordinances would take effect five days after the governor’s signature and filing with the Nebraska Secretary of State’s office.

A temporary rulebookidentical to the currently approved version, which will expire on July 15. They will be replaced next week.

Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers, whose responsibility it is to review the proposed rules for legal and constitutional validity, signed regulations for the use of medical cannabis on Tuesday. He said they “do not clearly violate the state constitution or the federal constitution.”

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In Store

Marijuana Retail Report

Published

on

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Marijuana Retail Report



Pillen did not make a statement about his approval of the rules

Nebraska’s medical cannabis regulations will become a permanent part of the state’s regulatory code on Monday, five days after Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen gave final approval.

Pillen announced Wednesday that he had signed proposed rulebook from Nebraska Medical Commission on Cannabis. Under state law, the ordinances would take effect five days after the governor’s signature and filing with the Nebraska Secretary of State’s office.

A temporary rulebookidentical to the currently approved version, which will expire on July 15. They will be replaced next week.

Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers, whose responsibility it is to review the proposed rules for legal and constitutional validity, signed regulations for the use of medical cannabis on Tuesday. He said they “do not clearly violate the state constitution or the federal constitution.”

To read the rest of this article on the Nebraska Examiner, Click here






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