Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The bill was prefiled December 9, 2020. Primary sponsors were Rep. Bill Herbkersman and Sen. Tom Davis, both Republicans. It was advanced by the Senate Medical Affairs Committee in March 2021, but failed to receive a vote in that year's session, and was scheduled by the Senate majority leader to be the first item debated in 2022.
Also in Virginia, SB 696, is aimed at individuals charged with felonies associated with marijuana prior to July 1, 2021 be released. [51] South Carolina Senate Bill 0423, the South Carolina Compassionate Care Act legalizing medical cannabis, was reintroduced on January 19 by Tom Davis (R).
The Senate unanimously agreed to debate the bill by, Sen. Tom Davis, the Republican from Beaufort, until it gets a vote one way or the other. South Carolina Senate agrees to medical marijuana bill ...
South Carolina S.150 / H.3361 South Carolina Compassionate Care Act. Bill December 9, 2020: Medical Began floor debate January 26, 2022 – the first time cannabis legalization of any kind had been debated in South Carolina. [150] Was passed by the senate on February 10 after weeks of debate. [151] On April 7, the bill was cleared by committee ...
As a region, the South has been slow to embrace marijuana reform. But states are beginning to legalize medical marijuana among other efforts. How marijuana laws have progressed across the South so ...
After seven sessions of circling the statehouse, the medical marijuana bill, sponsored by Sen. Tom Davis, R-Beaufort, got a shot on the senate floor.
Senate Bill 375, creating a legal adult-use market under the Hawaiʻi Cannabis Authority, was approved by its first committee on February 16. [45] Senate Bill 669, legalization of possession for adult use, was introduced in February. [46] South Carolina H 3561 to decriminalize cannabis was introduced on January 10. [47]
In 2017, South Carolina re-legalized the growing of industrial hemp, under the auspices of the federal 2014 Farm Bill. The new legislation permits up to 20 cultivators to hold state licenses for 20 acres (8.1 ha) each, expanding to 50 licenses and 50 acres (20 ha) for 2018. [2]