Republican lawmakers in Ohio are once again aiming to scale back parts of the state's voter-approved marijuana legalization law, looking to a proposal from last year that would have decreased allowable THC levels in state-legal cannabis products, reduced the number of plants that adults can grow at home and increased costs for consumers at dispensaries.
Those provisions, backed by Senate President Matt Huffman (R), were added to separate House legislation last year and passed by the Senate. House lawmakers ultimately blocked the Senate changes, however, with some members emphasizing the importance of protecting the will of voters, who passed the legalization law on a 53–47 margin in November 2023.
Come next month, however, Huffman will take over as speaker of the House, having won a seat in last month's election and subsequently being chosen for the leadership role by colleagues. The move is widely expected to give Huffman new power to push his marijuana proposal forward.
"There were some fundamental flaws in the initiative that was introduced and passed by the voters, which you usually have when there's not a vetting from all sides," Huffman told reporters last week about the voter-approved marijuana law. "The bill that the Senate passed last December addresses many of those things."
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