(A version of this story first appeared at Hemp Industry Daily.)
Last-minute disagreements about the rise of hemp-derived THC products in Washington state derailed legislative proposals to ban the sale of delta-8 THC derived from hemp extracts.
Washington state lawmakers looked at several bills to address hemp-derived intoxicants but failed to arrive at a compromise.
According to the Associated Press, lawmakers couldn’t agree on how much authority to give the state’s Liquor and Cannabis Board, the agency that regulates adult-use marijuana.
A cannabis attorney in Seattle, Justin P. Walsh of Gleam Law, told Hemp Industry Daily that dueling proposals about hemp intoxicants sold outside Washington state’s regulated adult-use marijuana market failed to gain enough support to advance to the governor’s desk during the state’s 60-day legislative term.
“The scuttlebutt is that it was a failure of some legislators to bring everyone to one table to hash it out,” said Walsh, who also teaches about cannabis policy and law at Seattle University School of Law.
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Horticultural professionals debunk 8 common lighting myths in cannabis How cannabis extraction companies can reduce energy costs Why experts say the future of horticultural lighting is in LED technology Cannabis lighting Glossary of Terms Buyers checklistMany states are looking at bills to regulate hemp intoxicants during current legislative sessions.
Lawmakers in many places are vowing to act after being surprised that federal law appears to allow licensed hemp operators to convert hemp-derived THC intoxicants that don’t exceed federal limits for delta-9 THC. That variant is the most abundant version of THC in the plant.