Tennessee Bill Would Ban Smokable Hemp Flower Products – Ganjapreneur | How to order Skittles Moonrock online
Learn how to order CBD 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.
👉 Click here to Visit our shop! 🛒

Mon / Feb 10th
A Tennessee proposal seeks to enact a statewide ban on products that contain smokable hemp flower.
Full story after the jump.
A new Tennessee proposal seeks to ban products containing smokable hemp flower, the Chattanooga Times Free Press reports. The bill would also move the sale of hemp products from convenience stores and gas stations to only age-restricted locations.
The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Ed Butler (R), said that he filed the proposal in response to what he sees as a “public health crisis” caused by intoxicating hemp products.
The ban is aimed specifically at hemp flower products containing THCa — the Tennesse hemp industry’s most popular product, accounting for between 60% and 90% of hemp sales — but the proposal would likely dash all hemp flower sales, including non-psychoactive CBD products. “It would get rid of everything,” Josh Manning, the chief executive of Snapdragon Hemp in Chattanooga, said in the report.
Meanwhile, another proposal in Tennessee seeks to legalize and regulate adult-use cannabis products in the state, and a poll released last year found that 63% of Tennessee voters support adult-use legalization, including 53% of Republicans and 78% of Democrats.
Manning told the Times Free Press that he hopes lawmakers will choose to enact more significant cannabis reforms:
“There’s a lot of gas stations that don’t do things the right way. But at the end of the day, if we’re going to do this type of program, it needs to be done under a medical or a recreational program. Because this is kind of like recreational rules.” — Manning, in the report
In December, Tennessee state officials and city officials in Spring Hills agreed to pay a $735,000 settlement to two hemp companies after law enforcement seized their products without proper justification.
Get daily cannabis business news updates. Subscribe
Have an additional perspective to share? Send us a message to let us know, and if your comment is chosen by our editors it could be featured here.
Ganjapreneur is made possible by our partners:
Latest Cannabis News
Texas Poll Finds 62% Voter Support for Cannabis Legalization
Illinois Cannabis Sales Exceeded $2B In 2024
Arkansas Medical Cannabis Sales Down In 2024 Despite More Product Sold
Cannabis Legalization Bill Approved by Two Hawaii House Committees
Pennsylvania Gov. Includes Cannabis Legalization in Executive Budget Proposal
Adult-Use Cannabis Bill Introduced in Tennessee
News by Market:
News by Topic:
- Stocks
- CBD
- Legalization
- Decriminalization
- Business
- Regulations
- Adult Use
- Medical Cannabis
- Social Equity
- Expungement
- Veterans
- Hemp Industry
- Events
- Politics
- Federal Policy
- Law Enforcement
- International
- Entrepreneurs
- Investing
- Licensing
- Banking
- Marketing
- Technology
- Celebrities
- Sports
- Popular Culture
- Normalization
- Extracts
- Edibles
- Lawsuits
Featured Business Profiles
From Our Partners
The Role of Terpenes in Blue Dream and Green Crack: What You Need to Know
DNA Genetics
Trends in Cannabis and Hemp Prerolls: Premium Options and Custom Formulas
HempNova
Top Shelf DNA Genetics Strains for Indoor Growing Success
DNA Genetics
Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!