Hawaii Moves to Legalize Medical Cannabis for Any Condition | Where to buy Skittles Moonrock online
Learn where to buy Skittles Moonrock online. TOP QUALITY GRADE A++
Cannabyss Inc. is the best place online to buy top quality weed, cannabis, vape, marijuana and CBD products. Get your borderless orders delivered at the pickup spot with ease. Top Grade products for client satisfaction.
đ Click here to Visit our shop! đ
Although an adult-use cannabis legalization bill crumbled earlier this year in Hawaii, state lawmakers are now pushing legislation that would expand access to medical cannabis to just about anyone.
The Senate adopted an amended version of House Bill 302 in a 24-1 vote on April 8. Sponsored by Rep. Gregg Takayama, D-Pearl City, the legislation aims to amend Hawaiiâs definition of a debilitating medical condition to mean any condition determined as âappropriateâ by a certifying physician or advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) for the use of medical cannabis.
In other words, health care providers could recommend medical cannabis for any condition they see fitâfrom minor headaches to trouble sleepingâinstead of being limited to the stateâs current list of qualifying conditions.
The Hawaii Department of Health (DOH) provided testimony on April 1, indicating that while its officials support allowing health care providers to use their professional judgment in diagnosing and treating patients, the department was concerned with opening the scope of the stateâs medical cannabis conditions.
âThere is limited scientific evidence supporting the use of cannabis for conditions beyond those currently listed in statute,â DOH officials wrote. âThe department is particularly concerned about potential risks to patient safety, including adverse drug interactions between cannabis and a patientâs existing treatment plan.â
Furthermore, the DOH opposed allowing a patientâs non-primary care doctors or APRNs to provide recommendations for medical cannabis.
In addition, the legislation would amend state law to clarify that a medical cannabis patient can establish a bona fide relationship with a health care provider without an initial in-person consultation.
In other words, the bona fide relationship necessary for a medical cannabis recommendation could be established via telehealth; however, medical cannabis telehealth certifications would be required to come from within the state.
âThe Legislature finds that access for qualifying patients and primary caregivers to medical cannabis and particularly licensed medical cannabis dispensaries remains challenging due to limited access to medical providers, delays in obtaining allowed access to enter and purchase medical cannabis, and the availability of cannabis through a thriving illicit market,â according to the bill.
While the number of registered medical cannabis patients peaked at 35,444 cardholders in August 2021, that number decreased by 15% to 30,035 cardholders by November 2024, according to H.B. 302.
âThis appears to indicate that residents are shifting away from licensed medical cannabis dispensaries and instead are obtaining their medical cannabis from elsewhere due to administrative barriers, delays in registering, and the ease and lower costs in obtaining cannabis elsewhere,â according to the bill.
Another provision included in the bill would make it a felony to operate a dispensary without a license and a misdemeanor to advertise unregulated cannabis.
H.B. 302 also would permit the DOH to issue additional medical cannabis cultivation licenses and define canopy sizes or plant counts for indoor and outdoor growers.
The Hawaiâi Cannabis Industry Association (HICIA), which represents the majority of the stateâs licensed dispensaries, provided written testimony to support easing access for medical cannabis patients but oppose the addition of cultivation licenses, suggesting that the current marketplace is already âextremely limited and constrained.â
âLicensees already have production centers that are underutilized and not growing at full capacity just to serve their own patient customer base,â HICIA officials wrote. âAdding additional products into this already tight legal system through cultivator licensees will simply flood the market with more product. This product will end up somewhere, and if not in licensed facilities, more likely in the illicit market.â
Other provisions included in the bill would allow licensed dispensaries to sell non-cannabis products in their waiting areasâsuch as federally legal hemp and certain paraphernaliaâand clarify the process for dispensary-to-dispensary sales to establish greater efficiencies.
Senate lawmakers did not discuss the legislation on the chamberâs floor before Tuesdayâs vote. Sen. Brenton Awa, R-Kaneohe, the minority partyâs leader, cast the lone vote in opposition.
Should the House concur with the Senateâs amendments, Democratic Gov. Josh Greenâwho said he supported adult-use legalization in the Aloha State during his 2023 campaign trailâwould likely sign the bill.
When Hawaii House members killed an adult-use legalization bill in April 2024, Green told Hawaii News Now that he had a possible solution to find a middle ground between the majority of Hawaiians who support legalization and the statesâ law enforcement agencies that continue to offer concerns about public safety.
âI think probably there is a place to find a more happy medium, and that is to expand peopleâs capacity to get medical marijuana under any circumstance they deem necessary with their physician,â he said.
Green pointed to Hawaiiâs laws supporting womenâs rights to make their own decisions about their bodies with their health care providers and to terminal patientsâ rights to make decisions with their health care providers regarding death with dignity over suffering in pain in the final six months of their lives.
âI think we can apply that same principle to the medical use of marijuana, which would significantly expand peopleâs legal use of marijuana but would still leave regulation in place regarding children, which has been one of the concerns,â the governor said a year ago.
Now in the final stages before heading off to Greenâs desk, H.B. 302âs adoption in the Senate comes two months after House lawmakers killed an adult-use legalization bill for the second straight year. Rep. Chris Todd, D-Hilo, suggested it didnât have enough support to pass and introduced a rare motion to table the legislation until next year.
Although Hawaii was one of the most progressive states in the nation when it became the first to legalize medical cannabis via the legislative process in 2000, it has since taken one of the most conservative approaches to adult-use reform.



Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!