Texas retailers that carry hemp flower and pre-rolls can continue to sell the products until at least April 28 after delays in an upcoming trial in a lawsuit challenging the state’s ban on smoked hemp products. Texas Public Radio reports.
Filed earlier this month by the Texas Hemp Business Council, the Hemp Industry and Farmers of America, and numerous hemp industry operators, including retailers, manufacturers and farmers, the lawsuit argues that the state’s ban on smoked hemp products is unconstitutional because it was established by the Department of State Health Services (DSHS), a statutory agency, and not by the agency.
The ban was discovered in early March and took effect on March 31, although a Travis County judge ordered a temporary injunction against the ban pending resolution of the lawsuit and related trials. The ban reflects introductory federal language that includes THCA when calculating total THC content—while THCA is itself non-intoxicating, the process of decarboxylation (which occurs when hemp is heated or burned) converts the cannabinoid into delta-9 THC, which is the form of THC most commonly associated with cannabis.
The lawsuit seeks only to block language banning smoked hemp products and does not seek to overturn packaging and testing requirements for new products imposed by DSHS, or steep increases in the hemp industry’s licensing costs.
Last year, Texas lawmakers passed legislation to ban intoxicating hemp products in the state. However, after pressure from the industry and thousands of consumers, Gov. Greg Abbott (R) eventually vetoed proposal and urged lawmakers to instead pass legislation to regulate the products. When lawmakers failed to act, the governor issued one executive order Last September it tasked state agencies with creating rules and regulations for a hemp industry in Texas.
