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New Jersey United for Marijuana Reform is an advocacy coalition of "religious, civil rights, law enforcement and medical leaders" who support legalization of marijuana in the state. [8] A report by New Jersey United for Marijuana Reform and New Jersey Policy Perspective, issued in 2016, concluded that if New Jersey legalized marijuana, it could ...
Business owners in the New Jersey liquor industry are bullish on hemp-derived THC beverages. The state has seen an estimated $25 million in sales this year alone, with some predicting over $100 ...
Medical cannabis. Thirty seven of the United States regulate some form of medical cannabis sales despite federal laws. [12] As of 2016 seventeen of those states (Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and Washington, D.C.) have at least one medical marijuana ...
Timeline of Gallup polls in US on legalizing marijuana. [1]In the United States, cannabis is legal in 39 of 50 states for medical use and 24 states for recreational use. At the federal level, cannabis is classified as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act, determined to have a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use, prohibiting its use for any purpose. [2]
A tall shelf at Yankee Spirits in Sturbridge is filled with nonalcoholic, hemp-derived delta-9 THC beverages like seltzers and cocktails. Package stores across the state are selling more THC ...
Each new letter signals a new strain — typically derived from legal hemp, but sometimes synthetically produced — that is high in cannabinoids other than Delta 9 THC.
Alexander Griffith was the first Colonial New Jersey Attorney General. 1714 –1719: Thomas Burnett Gordon (17 April 1652—April 28, 1722) was a Scottish emigrant to the Thirteen Colonies who became Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court and New Jersey Attorney General for the Province of New Jersey. [3] 1719 –1723: Jeremiah Basse
Aug. 13—CROOKSTON — An entrepreneur in Crookston is among the first in northwest Minnesota to open a store under a new Minnesota law that allows the sale and consumption of edibles containing ...