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Texas lawmakers passed House Bill 46 during the regular session

Few companies have licenses for cultivation, production and The sale of medical marijuana in Texas is expanding and changes following legislative action this year will likely increase demand for the state’s Compassionate Use Program (TCUP).

Texas lawmakers passed House Bill 46 during the regular session, which increased the number of licenses for drug-dispensing organizations to 12, expanded eligibility for the program to include chronic pain conditions and allowed dispensaries to store their products in satellites to reduce wait times for patients.

Data from Texas Department of Public Safety shows that the number of patients on the Compassionate Use Registry has increased by nearly 15,000 since the Legislature passed the bill in June. DPS is also in the process of vetting nine companies for new licenses grow and sell medical marijuana.

Nico Richardson, CEO of Texas Original, one of three licensed businesses, said the new law will bring Texas more in line with medical marijuana programs across the country. His company recently moved its base of operations from south Austin to a 75,000-square-foot facility in Bastrop. Everything from growing the plant, extracting the oils, manufacturing and testing the products all happens under one roof.

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The organization approved the legislation, SB 270, by a 33-2 vote

The Louisiana Senate passed a bill re allow terminally and terminally ill patients to use medical marijuana in hospitals.

The body approved the legislation, SB 270 by Sen. Katrina Jackson-Andrews (D), in a 33-2 vote on Wednesday. Now it is sent to the House of Representatives for consideration.

“This bill does exactly what the title says,” Jackson-Andrews said on the floor before the vote. “If a patient is in pain and they believe that medical marijuana will work and they have a prescription, it allows them to bring that prescription to the hospital and have one of their family members or themselves prescribe it.”

Under the proposal, hospitals would have to create written guidelines that allow covered patients to use medical cannabis on-site in ways other than smoking or vaping.

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Medical Marijuana

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“West Virginia Needs to Plan Better for the Future”

Despite a veto that could have delayed it even more spent $38 million on medical marijuana collected over the past four years, state Treasurer Larry Pack (R) now says he will release the funds as originally mandated.

Last week, Gov. Patrick Morrissey (R) vetoed a bill that would have required funding for medical marijuana to help the homeless and expedite child abuse and neglect cases in the court system. He said the bill would tie up money for future spending.

In his veto letter, Morrissey wrote, “West Virginia needs to do a better job of planning for the future, and it cannot preemptively lock in such future revenue streams when it has the reserves to invest more in roads, water, sewer, site selection, rail and future tax cuts.”

Morrissey said he is willing to negotiate with the Legislature on how to spend the money.

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Georgia

Georgia’s House Passes Bill Seeking To Ease Access To Medical Cannabis Program

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Georgia’s House Passes Bill Seeking To Ease Access To Medical Cannabis Program

A bill aimed at modernizing Georgia’s medical cannabis program has passed the Georgia House with broad bipartisan support, another step in lawmakers’ years-long effort to gradually expand patient access to the program.

Senate Bill 220introduced by Sen. Matt Brass, R-Newnan, would expand medical licensing requirements for cannabis, change limits on the amount of cannabis someone can possess and allow patients to use the product in a vape. It was adopted in the House of Representatives by 138-21 votes.

The changes made to the bill take into account the feedback ofHouse Study CommitteeAccording to Rep. Mark Newton, an Augusta Republican who supported the bill in the House of Representatives, which convened last year to study the issue. In a speech shortly before Wednesday’s vote, he said updates to the program are necessary to ensure patients and providers can successfully navigate the program.

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Post The Georgia House of Representatives passes a bill to facilitate access to the medical cannabis program first appeared on Marijuana Retail Report – News and information for cannabis retailers.

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