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Freddy Miller talks about his experience of going viral and ending up filming a television show for Hulu Tuesday, April, 2, 2024 in the break room of Cannavista Wellness in Buchanan, Michigan.
Jess Jackson, 35, co-founder of the Copper House, rolls a joint at her cannabis-friendly Airbnb space in Detroit, Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023.
Cannabis in Michigan is legal for recreational use. A 2018 initiative to legalize recreational use (the Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act) passed with 56% of the vote. State-licensed sales of recreational cannabis began in December 2019. Medical use was legalized in 2008 through the Michigan Compassionate Care Initiative. It ...
Michigan's Cannabis Regulatory Agency on Monday laid out how the Drug Enforcement Administration's plan to change the classification of marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug could ...
Since 2012, various jurisdictions in the United States have legalized cannabis for recreational use. Because there are no border controls between U.S. states and citizens are allowed to travel freely between them, this has resulted in the proliferation of cannabis dispensaries located in towns that border states where cannabis remains illegal.
Michigan has already passed local medical marijuana initiatives in five cities—Ann Arbor, Detroit, Ferndale, Flint, and Traverse City—and by large margins. A poll by Marketing Resource Group in March 2008 showed 67% of voters saying they supported medical marijuana and 62% voicing approval for this particular initiative.
Some cannabis businesses are scrambling to stay afloat as unemployment undercuts sales and regulatory compliance pressures margins. And some companies are capitalizing on pandemic-related weakness ...
Perry Bullard, an early participant in Hash Bash and a proponent of marijuana legalization in Michigan. The first Hash Bash took place on April 1, 1972, as a reaction to the Michigan Supreme Court's ruling on March 9, 1972, which deemed unconstitutional the law that had been used to convict cultural activist John Sinclair for possessing two marijuana joints. [2]