COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio now has two competing visions for how its recreational marijuana market should operate. One version, passed by the state Senate, would cut home grow limits, restrict outdoor use and ban sharing.
Smoking recreational marijuana is legal in Ohio, and has been for months. However, there are already limits, like not smoking in public places like parks. Owners of private proper
Ohio Senate Republicans passed a bill Wednesday that would would make significant changes to the marijuana law passed by Ohio voters in 2023, including reducing allowable levels of THC, limiting home grow,
Ivan Fortunato, a New York man charged after police say he trafficked 700 pounds of cannabis through Ohio, missed a court date and is at large, court records indicate.
Ohio's recreational marijuana law is supposed to support small, diverse businesses. That program is now on the chopping block.
Gov. Mike DeWine and the GOP-controlled Legislature are debating changes to the program approved by voters in 2023.
The number of plants households can grow would drop if the Senate's overhaul of Ohio's marijuana regulation becomes law.
The Ohio Senate passed Senate Bill 56, which would change the recreational marijuana law approved by voters in 2023.
Senate Bill 56 would lower the household limit for plants, ban outdoor smoking and eliminate small cannabis grower licenses.
A Republican Ohio lawmaker has introduced a rival bill to Senate-passed legislation that seeks to amend the state’s voter-approved marijuana legalization law. And the proposed changes in the House measure are less sweeping—for example,
Ohio lawmakers have taken the first major step in limiting recreational marijuana laws that voters overwhelmingly approved. After a Senate vote to approve the limits, only passage in the House and a signature from Gov.
An Ohio Senate committee has approved a bill to make significant changes to the state’s voter-approved marijuana law—by halving the number of plants adults could grow, adding certain criminal penalties and removing select social equity provisions,