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Activists in Alaska are working to legalize psychedelics, including psilocybin, mescaline, and DMT, and create a state-regulated system for facilitated use. The group Natural Medicine Alaska is gathering signatures for a 2026 ballot measure. The proposal would legalize non-commercial use and create a state-regulated program.

Alaska Activists Launch Campaign To Put Psychedelics Legalization Measure On 2026 Ballot

Jun 17, 2025

Ben Adlin

Marijuana Moment



Activists in Alaska are working to put a measure on the 2026 state ballot
to legalize certain psychedelics—including psilocybin, mescaline and
DMT—and create a state-regulated system for facilitated use.

The group Natural Medicine Alaska this week officially began gathering
signatures in the cities of Anchorage and Palmer as part of a first step in
the state’s initiative process.

Organizers first have to submit 100 signatures of qualified registered
voters to get the process rolling. From there, the state Lt. Gov. Nancy
Dahlstrom (R) has 60 days to decide whether to certify the proposal for
further signature gathering to qualify for the 2026 ballot.

While language of the prospective ballot measure is not available on
Natural Medicine Alaska’s website—and the group did not immediately respond
to an emailed request from Marijuana Moment—a policy outline explains the
plan as “building off of” Colorado’s voter-approved 2022 Natural Medicine
Health Act, under which facilitators recently administered the state’s
first legal dose of psilocybin.

The Alaska proposal would legalize non-commercial use, cultivation and
sharing of DMT, non-peyote mescaline, psilocybin and psilocin under a
so-called “grow, gather, gift” model popular among psychedelic reform
proponents.

It would further create a state-regulated program where adults would be
administered natural medicines in a supervised setting, and it would allow
certain medical professionals to “prescribe and dispense microdoses…to
patients.”

The policy outline says the measure “shifts away from a restrictive healing
center model, allowing individual practitioners to provide [natural
medicine] in their offices and at-home facilitation, increasing
accessibility in rural communities” common in Alaska.

Facilities would need to be “majority Alaska-owned, ensuring economic
benefits stay within the state.”

Traditional healers would also be protected under the proposed initiative
for “ceremonial, spiritual, or cultural use of plant medicines” through
legal exemptions to state drug laws.

“We see a future where natural medicines are available as an option to all
who are seeking out healing and well-being, a future where education on
these medicines empowers the Alaskan community with legalized personal use
of psilocybin and other natural psychedelics,” says a Natural Medicine
Alaska campaign video uploaded to YouTube in February. “We see an Alaska
transformed by the decriminalization of entheogens into a regulated and
supportive environment for the therapeutic use of psychedelics.”

One natural medicine, ibogaine, would be specifically prohibited for
personal use, though ibogaine treatment centers are included in the
proposal as component “to be implemented once Alaska’s regulated access
program is established.”

“Traditional use [of iboga] by highly trained and recognized practitioners”
would also be protected under the plan.

Other provisions in the policy outline include expungement and
record-clearing for past criminal offenses related to natural medicine,
local protections “for active duty [military] members, law enforcement and
first responders who use [natural medicines] covered under the initiative”
and support for synthetic versions of ibogaine “to promote sustainability
and prevent overharvesting of natural sources.”

Alaska would be further required under the proposal, the outline says, “to
provide psychedelic crisis assessment and intervention training for first
responders to enhance their knowledge and skills to quickly and effectively
respond to emotional and behavioral crisis events involving [natural
medicines].”

A poll last year found that nearly half (49.4 percent) of adults in Alaska
would support a ballot measure to more broadly remove criminal penalties
for using substances such as psilocybin mushrooms.

That support rose markedly—to nearly two thirds (65 percent)—when
participants were told that Alaska has high rates of mental illnesses that
could potentially be treated with psychedelics.

Last year, Alaska lawmakers passed legislation to create a state task force
to study how to license and regulate psychedelic-assisted therapy. The
measure took effect without the signature of Gov. Mike Dunleavy (R).

So far two other states have facilitated psychedelics programs that are
fully operational. Oregon voters legalized therapeutic psilocybin in 2020,
and Colorado’s program was passed at the ballot box in 2022, with the
state’s governor signing legislation a year later to create the regulatory
framework for the program.

In Oregon, more people could eventually access legal psilocybin following a
recent federal court ruling in favor of plaintiffs who argued that the
state’s first-in-the nation psilocybin law wrongfully prevents homebound
patients from seeking care.

Four care providers—three licensed psilocybin facilitators and a physician
specializing in advanced and terminal illnesses—sued the state about year
ago, alleging that the state Psilocybin Services Act (PSA) discriminates
against disabled individuals who can’t travel to designated service centers
where the substance is administered.

In Maine, meanwhile, lawmakers last week reversed course and rejected a
bill to legalize possession of up to one ounce of psilocybin by people 21
and older.

At the federal level, attorneys for a doctor seeking to reschedule
psilocybin so he can administer it to terminally ill patients recently demanded
an update from the Drug Enforcement Administration, which previously agreed
to submit a request for a scientific review of the psychedelic from the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Separately in Alaska, a federal judge ruled late last month that state
officials did not violate the constitution when restricting intoxicating
hemp products in 2023.

GOP Senators File Bill To Ramp Up Criminalization Of ‘Candy-Flavored’
Marijuana Edibles

The post Alaska Activists Launch Campaign To Put Psychedelics Legalization
Measure On 2026 Ballot appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

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