After two years of fits and starts, extensive legislation changing recreational cannabis laws and banning so-called intoxicating hemp, including hemp-derived beverages, will head to Gov. Mike DeWine.
If signed, the final version of Senate Bill 56 that cleared the Ohio Senate on Tuesday afternoon will ban most intoxicating hemp within 90 days, but give THC and CBD beverages more runway—mirroring the timeline of recent federal action against hemp.
As for adult-use marijuana legalized by voters in 2023, SB 56 will enable the state to distribute more than $80 million in tax revenue over the next two fiscal years, through what’s known as the Host Community Cannabis Fund, to local governments with dispensaries in their jurisdiction.
“For two years, municipalities have worked in good faith,” Ohio Municipal League Executive Director Kent Scarrett said in an email Tuesday, “based on the promise that a share of the adult-use cannabis excise tax would return to the communities hosting dispensaries.”
Democrats in both chambers took issue with the final version of SB 56 recriminalizing marijuana possession, like by making it a state crime to store edibles outside their original packaging or possess any product bought legally in another state.
“This final agreement between the Republicans in the House and the Republicans in the Senate, what you see are elements of them being totally out of touch with everyday Ohioans,” Senate Minority Leader Nickie Antonio (D-Lakewood) told reporters.
Senate President Rob McColley (R-Napoleon) defended SB 56, saying it brings cannabis statute more in line with tobacco and alcohol.
“It’s not something that’s going to be heavily penalized, but it’s something that we need to make sure that (law enforcement has) the tools necessary in the event that they need to be able to enforce that,” McColley told reporters.
A spokesperson for DeWine said he will need to review SB 56. The governor generally can issue line item vetoes anytime bills appropriate money.