Blog
New Bills Would Limit Dab Sales to 25+ or Propose New Taxes
The same folks who keep trying to ban dabs are trying to raise the purchase age or raise taxes on cannabis concentrates.
Action Needed: Stop the 65% Tax on Dabs
We need to kill those concentrate bills in their infancy, and lend the homegrow bill our support. This only takes a few minutes and will go a long way!
I Misunderstood HB 1249
I thought some butthole was trying to ruin liquid edibles by forcing all their producers to switch to 4mg individual units (which, given Washington's cannabis legislation history, I don't think that interpretation was farfetched).
The War on High THC Products is Far From Over
Upon reading the initial report, however, it seems clear that the ADAI is shying away from last year’s main talking point of “think of the children” and now working on policies that aim to make the cannabis market even more miserable for grown-ass adult consumers…
They Wanna Limit All Concentrates to 30% THC (HB 1463)
House Bill 1463 was introduced in early 2021, and if passed, it would limit all concentrates and cartridges to 30% THC, and make it so retailers can’t sell these shitty dabs and carts to adults who are younger than 25.
Eliminate Taxes on Medical Marijuana Purchases (SB 5004)
Senate Bill 5004 was introduced in early 2021, and if passed, it would eliminate excise taxes on DOH-certified products when they’re purchased by registered medical marijuana patients.
Washington Needs Cannabis Consumer Advocacy
The cannabis users of Washington need a unified voice to speak out against over-regulations that have resulted in wasteful packaging, weak edibles, dry weed, high taxes, no delivery services, no homegrows, and nowhere to consume legally. This shit needs to change.
Craft Grows & The Future of Social Consumption (HB 1260)
House Bill 1260 was introduced in early 2021, and if passed, it will create standards for craft cannabis farms that consumers can visit and buy their weed directly from the growers.
Legalize Washington Home Grows (HB 1019)
House Bill 1019 was introduced in early 2021, and if passed, it will allow each household to grow up to 6 plants.