CRB Monitor News
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
  • Licensing
  • Regulation
  • Markets
  • Securities
  • Research
SUBSCRIBE
  • Licensing
  • Regulation
  • Markets
  • Securities
  • Research
No Result
View All Result
CRB Monitor News
No Result
View All Result

CA Governor Vetoes Legal Psychedelics, Decides Other Cannabis Legislation

Maria Brosnan by Maria Brosnan
2 years ago
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Home Regulation

Concerned about legalizing personal use of psychedelics before a therapeutic program is in place, California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill that would have decriminalized personal possession of certain psychedelic narcotics in 2025. He also vetoed and signed various cannabis regulation bills in the last week.

SB 58, sponsored by Sen. Scott Weiner, would have allowed people age 21 and older to possess certain amounts of mescaline, dimethyltryptamine (DMT), psilocybin and psilocyn for personal use beginning Jan. 1, 2025. It also would have required a Health and Human Services Agency working group to study a potential regulated, therapeutic program and provide a report by then.

In his Oct. 7 veto letter, he acknowledged that peer-reviewed science and personal anecdotes have proven that psychedelics can relieve certain mental health conditions such as depression, PTSD, traumatic brain injury and other addictive personality traits. He said it is an “exciting frontier” California will lead.

RELATED POSTS

Immigration Raids Hurt Glass House’s Production Outlook

OMMA Suspends Greenleaf Labs’ License

Texas Governor Vetoes Hemp-Derived THC Ban

“California should immediately begin work to set up regulated treatment guidelines — replete with dosing information, therapeutic guidelines, rules to prevent against exploitation during guided treatments, and medical clearance of no underlying psychoses,” he stated. “Unfortunately, this bill would decriminalize possession prior to these guidelines going into place, and I cannot sign it.”

He urged the legislature to come back next year with a bill that includes therapeutic guidelines.

“I am, additionally, committed to working with the legislature and sponsors of this bill to craft legislation that would authorize permissible uses and consider a framework for potential broader decriminalization in the future, once the impacts, dosing, best practice, and safety guardrails are thoroughly contemplated and put in place,” he said in the letter.

The bill is now back with the Senate for consideration of the governor’s veto.

CRB Monitor CRB Monitor CRB Monitor

Weiner’s spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.

Meanwhile, psychedelic treatment advocates have begun gathering signatures for a voter petition for the November 2024 ballot. The TREAT California Act would establish a state agency that would be financed with $5 billion in bonds to fund clinical trials.

Newsom signs, vetoes cannabis legislation

In regards to the legalized cannabis market in the Golden State, Newsom signed a bill on Oct. 8 that gives the state Department of Cannabis Control (DCC) more authority in determining a unique identifier program, known as track and trace.

While the bill introduced by Sen. Ben Allen did not specifically mention it, SB 622 reportedly would allow regulators to implement a single-tag system, that would be more environmentally friendly and could save the state millions of dollars.

Newsom also vetoed two other cannabis-related bills on Oct. 8.

AB 374, introduced by Assemblymember Matt Haney, would have allowed cannabis cafes where customers could smoke their cannabis while enjoying a snack or nonalcoholic beverage and maybe some live music. But the bill flies in the face of existing state law that bans smoking at workplaces.

“I appreciate the author’s intent to provide cannabis retailers with increased business opportunities and an avenue to attract new customers. However, I am concerned this bill could undermine California’s long-standing smoke-free workplace protections,” Newsom said in his veto letter.

He also did not sign a bill intended to restrict marketing of cannabis products to children, AB 1207. He said the way the bill, introduced by Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, defined “attractive to children” was “overly broad.”

Newsom said in his veto letter, “By prohibiting entire categories of images, this bill would sweep in commonplace designs, and I am not convinced that these additional limits will meaningfully protect children beyond what is required under existing law.”

He instead directed the DCC to “strengthen and expand” current youth marketing protections, including enhanced enforcement.

Keep up with all the news impacting the regulated cannabis market with the CRB Monitor weekly news digest. Subscribe now.
Tags: California
ShareTweet
Maria Brosnan

Maria Brosnan

Maria Brosnan brings to CRB Monitor more than 20 years of experience in financial journalism, marketing and communications. She began covering the cannabis industry during the early days of medical marijuana legalization as editor of The Marijuana Business Report for DealFlow Media. As editor of CRB Monitor News, she covers cannabis legislation, regulation and litigation while managing news content.

Related Posts

Texas Governor Vetoes Hemp-Derived THC Ban
Legislation

Texas Expands Its Medical Cannabis Program

7 days ago
Markets

Metrc and BioTrack Form Partnership

2 weeks ago
Cannabis market
Licensing

Michigan Shuts Down Two Labs, Bans Owners

3 weeks ago
CRB Monitor News - Glass House Brands cannabis grow site
Markets

Immigration Raids Hurt Glass House’s Production Outlook

3 weeks ago
Next Post

CRB Monitor Chart of the Month | September 2023

CRBMonitor - Cannabis-Related Equity Performance - September 2023

Cannabis-Related Securities Monthly Update | September 2023

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Download

Read CRB Monitor’s Seminal Analysis of Cannabis Business Risk

Download

Popular Post

Commerce Clause Bid to Block Maryland Licensing Lottery Fails

4th Circuit Upholds Maryland’s Social Equity Program

by Zack Huffman
September 12, 2025
0

The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Maryland’s social equity licensing rules, affirming the denial of a...

Texas Governor Vetoes Hemp-Derived THC Ban

Texas Expands Its Medical Cannabis Program

by Maria Brosnan
September 8, 2025
0

Texas is accepting applications for dispensary organizations as it expands its low-THC Compassionate Use Program under a new law, while...

Metrc and BioTrack Form Partnership

by Zack Huffman
September 3, 2025
0

Metrc and BioTrack, the two dominant providers of seed-to-sale (STS) digital platforms for legal cannabis markets, have joined forces. But...

CRB Monitor Securities Update | July 2025

by James Francis
August 29, 2025
0

Last month we wrote about some of the sources of risk in the cannabis equity realm, which include shrinking market...

Recent News post

Commerce Clause Bid to Block Maryland Licensing Lottery Fails

4th Circuit Upholds Maryland’s Social Equity Program

September 12, 2025
Texas Governor Vetoes Hemp-Derived THC Ban

Texas Expands Its Medical Cannabis Program

September 8, 2025

Metrc and BioTrack Form Partnership

September 3, 2025
CRB Monitor

Cannabis Corporate Intelligence

  • About us
  • Editorial
  • Home
  • My account
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscription
  • Legislation
  • Licensing
  • Litigation
  • Markets
  • Premium
  • Regulation
  • Research
  • Securities
  • Uncategorized
  • Resources
  • Leadership

© 2023-2025 Enhanced Compliance Solutions Inc.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • About us
  • Account
  • Cart
  • Checkout
    • Confirmation
    • Order History
    • Receipt
    • Transaction Failed
  • Checkout
  • Editorial
  • Home
  • Login
  • My account
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe data
  • Subscribe to our weekly licensing news digest
  • Subscription
    • Register to receive full access

© 2023-2025 Enhanced Compliance Solutions Inc.

×