Legal weed takes effect in Ohio as lawmakers try to change voter-passed law
- Ohio has become the 24th state in the US to legalize adult-use marijuana, allowing individuals to possess up to 2.5 ounces of weed and grow up to six plants.
- However, lawmakers in Ohio are already rushing to pass legislation to make changes to the voter-approved initiative, including altering potency caps, taxation, home cultivation, and social equity and expungement provisions.
- The Senate has proposed halving the number of plants allowed for home grow, increasing the excise tax to 15 percent, and allowing medical marijuana dispensaries to serve the adult-use market immediately.
- Advocates for the legalization campaign argue that the Senate's proposed restrictions and higher tax rates could still drive people to purchase marijuana in neighboring states like Michigan.
Adults can now possess up to 2.5 ounces of weed and grow up to six plants.
Ohio is officially the 24th state to have legal, adult-use marijuana.
Provisions of a voter-approved legalization law took effect at midnight, including legal possession and home cultivation for anyone at least 21 years old.
But Ohio lawmakers are rushing to pass legislation to make changes to the initiative. On Wednesday, the Senate passed legislation to alter potency caps, taxation, home cultivation, and social equity and expungement provisions.
The Senate proposal would also speed up legal sales by allowing medical marijuana dispensaries to start serving recreational customers immediately.
The details: Adults can now possess up to 2.5 ounces of weed and grow up to six plants.
Under the voter-passed law, cannabis is subject to a 10 percent excise tax and revenues are directed towards an equity and jobs program.
The legalization law also sets up a new cannabis regulatory agency, which will have nine months to go through a rule-making process to launch adult-use sales.
What the Senate wants: The Senate proposal would halve the number of plants allowed for home grow, increase the excise tax to 15 percent and allow medical marijuana dispensaries to start serving the adult-use market immediately.
It would require expungements upon request and scrap the social equity and jobs program. Instead, the tax revenues would go towards law enforcement training, substance abuse treatment and the state’s general fund.
“What the Senate passed yesterday still does not respect the will of the voters,” said Tom Haren, a spokesperson for the legalization campaign.
Haren says that potency restrictions and higher tax rates under the Senate bill will make it difficult to compete with the illicit market and will still drive Ohioans to buy marijuana in Michigan.
What’s next: The House Finance committee is taking up its own marijuana bill today. The House bill hews closer to the voter-approved initiative.