Indiana Marijuana Laws: Medical (CBD) It is illegal to possess, use, purchase, sell, or cultivate marijuana in Indiana for medical or recreational purposes.43It has been legal to use cannabis extracts high in CBD both for treating qualifying conditions and recreational purposes since 2017 and 201...
Some states don't allow medical use of potentially intoxicating products high in THC. However, they do allow some access or provide legal protections for people using products low in THC but high in CBD for medical or research reasons. These states include Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, North...
Congress has passed a budget proviso that barred the Department of Justice from using taxpayer dollars to prevent states from ‘implementing their own laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.' ...
Launched the award-winning flower brand, LIT, for wholesale as well as retail purchase in four Ayr Greater Boston locations. Announced the opening of ninth affiliated medical dispensary in Pennsylvania, AYR Indiana, in July. Southwest Completed the first sale from new 80,000 square foot cultivation...
How to Get a Medical Marijuana Card in Indiana If you hope to get an Indiana medical card soon, you will likely be disappointed. Legislators in favor of MMJ in the Hoosier State cannot overcome the existing level of political opposition. This is a shame because there is strong public suppor...
Indiana Iowa Kentucky North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Texas Wisconsin Wyoming States with no cannabis access laws Idaho Kansas* (State allows for possession and sale of CBD products,as long as they contain zero THC) Nebraska States with legalization measures on the ballot in 2022 ...
--- #2 most common destination from Indiana Indiana Publichall // Wikimedia Commons Indiana #3. Ohio - Moved from Indiana to Ohio in 2019: 12,714 --- 8.9% of residents that moved - Moved from Ohio to Indiana in 2019: 12,038
states banned cannabis in the 1910s: Massachusetts in 1911; Maine, Wyoming and Indiana in 1913; New York City in 1914; Utah and Vermont in 1915; Colorado and Nevada in 1917. As in California, these laws were passed not due to any widespread use or concern about cannabis, but as ...
Some states don't allow medical use of potentially intoxicating products high in THC. However, they do allow some access or provide legal protections for people using products low in THC but high in CBD for medical or research reasons. These states include Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, North...