COLUMBUS, Ohio — The state Senate approved Senate Bill 56 Tuesday, sending legislation to Gov. Mike DeWine that would limit intoxicating hemp sales to licensed dispensaries, cap THC levels in cannabis products, restrict public consumption and ban possession of out-of-state purchases. The bill passed on a 22‑7 party-line vote after the House approved it late last month; it follows a court-blocked executive ban on THC-infused products introduced in October. Proponents say the measures protect public safety and streamline licensing; opponents argue they contradict voters' 2023 legalization and harm small businesses. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research published this week.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 5 original reports from FOX19 WXIX TV, Cleveland, http://www.wtol.com, Business Journal Daily | The Youngstown Publishing Company and Marijuana Business Daily.
Licensed dispensaries and larger marijuana companies will likely gain market share and regulatory advantages from SB 56's restrictions on intoxicating hemp sales, THC caps, and limits on retail channels.
Small hemp retailers, convenience stores, and out-of-state purchasers face lost revenue, restricted access, and potential criminal penalties under the proposed restrictions.
After reading and researching latest news.... Ohio's SB 56 would restrict intoxicating hemp sales to licensed dispensaries, cap THC in products, limit public use and criminalize out-of-state possession; passage followed a 22–7 Senate vote and a prior court-blocked executive ban, potentially consolidating market access within licensed dispensaries.
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Ohio Senate Approves Broad Restrictions on Cannabis Use
FOX19 WXIX TV Cleveland http://www.wtol.com Business Journal Daily | The Youngstown Publishing Company Marijuana Business DailyNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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