Arkansas AG approves ballot measure expanding medical marijuana access

Key Points
  • Arkansas attorney general approved language for a ballot initiative to expand the state's medical marijuana program and potentially legalize adult use.
  • The initiative would allow for more dispensaries, home cultivation, and possession limits for medical marijuana patients.
  • The proposal also includes a provision to legalize adult use if federal marijuana laws change.
  • In 2023, Arkansas dispensaries saw record sales of $283 million from 62,227 pounds of marijuana, with over 97,000 active medical marijuana patient cards in the state.

Arkansas’ attorney general has signed off on language for a November ballot initiative that aims to vastly expand the state’s medical marijuana program and opens the door for full legalization.

The Tuesday approval clears the way for advocates of The Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment of 2024 to collect 90,704 signatures from registered voters by July 5 to qualify for the ballot, according to the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

The proposal, which comes amid an increase in registered medical patients, would:

The initiative would also legalize adult use if the federal government removes marijuana from the controlled substance list or eliminates possession as a crime, the newspaper reported.

The measure would also amend the state constitution by giving voters the right to alter constitutional amendments, not lawmakers.

In January, state Attorney General Tim Griffin rejected ballot language pertaining to the ballot’s former title, Arkansas Medical Cannabis Amendment of 2024.

In November 2022, Arkansas voters opposed a ballot measure to legalize recreational marijuana amid a backlash from political and religious conservatives as well as progressive cannabis advocates.

Meanwhile, MMJ sales in the state totaled $23 million in January, slightly down year-over-year, according to figures released by the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration.

In 2023, the state’s 38 licensed dispensaries registered record sales of $283 million from 62,227 pounds of marijuana sold.

The state, which launched MMJ sales in May 2019, has eight cultivators and nine licensed processors.

The Arkansas health department reported 97,253 active MMJ patient cards through January, up from 89,855 a year earlier.

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