“I thought this fight was winnable. It’s a bill that doesn’t cost the state a dime and protects kids from life-threatening marijuana overdoses. I was wrong.”
By Mia Maldonado, Oregon Capital Chronicle
An essay limit how much THC can be in an individual edible it is not progressing in Oregon this year.
Senate Bill 1548 was an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the production of edibles with more than 10 milligrams of THC by targeting edibles that must be divided into multiple servings.
Sen. Lisa Reynolds, a Portland Democrat and pediatrician, introduced the bill amid growing reports of children seeking medical attention after eating edibles like cookies, brownies and gummies. In 2023, children under the age of 5 accounted for one-third of all cannabis-related cases at the Oregon Poison Center.
Major medical groups supported the bill, and it passed the Senate on a bipartisan vote of 22-5. But it died in the House after marijuana industry lobbyists convinced House lawmakers to support the bill, Reynolds said in a news release.
“I thought this fight was winnable,” Reynolds wrote. “This is a bill that doesn’t cost the state a dime and protects children from life-threatening marijuana overdoses. I was wrong.”
Marijuana lobbyists argued that the bill would create more plastic waste by having to individually wrap each edible and that businesses would not have the money to buy the machinery used to individually wrap the edibles. Also, lobbyists said the bill would cost the state millions in revenue because it would eliminate popular marijuana products.
Oregon marijuana products are paid up to 20 percent depending on where they are sold. Marijuana tax revenue is expected to bring in $143.7 million in 2025, according to the Oregon Department of Revenue, and the revenue is distributed to drug and treatment programs, public schools, mental health services, Oregon State Police and cities and counties across the state.
Reynolds disputed those claims, saying invoice It’s based on Washington’s law that limits edible servings to 10 milligrams of THC. When Washington passed its law, the price of marijuana didn’t go up, he said. Additionally, the law resulted in 75 percent fewer hospitalizations and half the reported poisonings at poison centers, according to Dr. Julia Dilley, Multnomah County epidemiologist.
Reynolds, who chairs the Senate Committee on Childhood and Behavioral Health, heard from experts in May how Oregon’s youth have some of the highest rates of cannabis use in the country, yet rank at the bottom when it comes to recognizing the dangers.
Oregon’s marijuana regulation is of particular interest to Reynolds, who believes his brother’s regular marijuana use in the 70s contributed to serious mental health problems and frequent psychiatric hospital admissions as an adult. On Thursday in the Senate, he appeared in favor of a Republican resolution Even though he voted against bypassing normal legal procedures to push the bill through to require Oregonians not to use drugs, including marijuana.
Oregon youth already face more mental health challenges than adults, with youth suicide rates consistently higher than the U.S. rate.
Reynolds said he plans to introduce more marijuana safety proposals in 2027 and will try to hire a lobbyist.
This story was first published by the Oregon Capital Chronicle.