William Zhang

Massachusetts House Passes Bill to Overhaul Cannabis Regulatory Agency, Increase License Caps and Purchase Limits

The Massachusetts House has passed a bill to overhaul the state’s Cannabis Control Commission, raise the license caps for retailers, and increase the daily purchasing limits for cannabis shoppers.

Full story after the jump.

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The Massachusetts House last week passed a bill that would raise the caps on the number of retail cannabis licenses an individual or entity can hold, increase daily purchase limits from 1 ounce of flower to 2 ounces, and regulate intoxicating beverages and consumable derived from hemp, WGBH reports. The bill would also overhaul how members of the state Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) are selected, taking the governor alone with appointing a full-time chair and two part time associate commissioners. 

Under current law, passed in 2017, the CCC is comprised of five members who members are appointed by the treasurer, attorney general, and governor, with the treasurer selecting the chair. 

In an interview with WGBH, state Rep. Daniel Donahue (D), House chair of the Cannabis Policy Committee, said the changes “still protect the commissioners’ independence in policymaking and in investigations and adjudications of violations.”  

“The cannabis industry, with its complexities and challenges, requires a nimble and efficient regulator.” — Donahue to WGBH 

The proposal comes about a year after state Inspector General Jeffrey Shapiro asked lawmakers to take charge of a “rudderless agency.” During a hearing with lawmakers last July, Shapiro described the CCC as a “train wreck” and the “Wild West” and suggested lawmakers appoint a receiver to oversee the agency. In 2023, state Treasurer Deborah Goldberg suspended then-chair Shannon O’Brien and ultimately removed her from the role. O’Brien is currently challenging the firing in court.   

In a statement, Shanel Lindsay, co-founder of advocacy group Equitable Opportunities Now, raised concerns with the proposed CCC changes and argued that raising the cap on licenses could make way for large, multi-state operators to move in at the expense of small, local businesses, describing the move as “a gift to corporate cannabis and a death sentence for local and social equity businesses.”  

How is someone with one, two, or three stores supposed to compete with someone buying for six or more stores?” Lindsay said in the statement. “It will undermine everything Massachusetts has worked so hard to achieve in building the most equitable cannabis industry in the country.” 

The bill moves next to the state Senate. 

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