A Florida bill that sought to cap THC potency if voters approve a legalization initiative that could appear on the November ballot is effectively dead for the session, the GOP House sponsor says.
Similar versions of the legislation, which would have prohibited dispensary sales of adult-use cannabis flower with a potency of greater than 30 percent THC, advanced through committees in both chambers but are now presumed dead given time constraints.
The Senate measure moved through the Health Policy Committee earlier this month, but it was not placed on the Fiscal Policy Committee’s agenda for its final meeting of the 60-day session on Tuesday.
In addition to capping THC content at 30 percent for flower, all other cannabis products would be limited to 60 percent THC under the bill. It would have also set a serving size on edible products of 10 milligrams THC or less, with the total amount per package no more than 200 mg.
The House bill was separately approved in the Health and Human Services Committee this month. If it passed on the floor of that chamber, the Senate could theoretically take it up, as Florida Politics reported. But the measures are not identical and the
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