top of page
tokers-guide-find-the-best-weed-in-dc-lo
NEW 1 to 1 photo editing 122024 (17).png
Major alcohol retailers have formed the Beverage Alcohol Merchants Coalition (BAMCO) to urge Congress to delay a federal law recriminalizing hemp-derived THC products, calling for the passage of the Hemp Planting Predictability Act to grant a two-year reprieve and allow time to apply the existing three-tier alcohol regulatory system to hemp beverages. BAMCO advocates for a regulated approach, including limiting sales to adults over 21, mandated testing, and responsible marketing, rather than an outright prohibition of the products.

Alcohol Retailers Push Congress To Delay Hemp THC Ban While Regulations Are Crafted

Jan 22, 2026

Tom Angell

Marijuana Moment



Major alcohol retailers are coming together to encourage Congress to delay
the enactment of a law President Donald Trump recently signed that will
federally recriminalize hemp-derived THC beverages and other products.

The newly launched Beverage Alcohol Merchants Coalition’s (BAMCO) founding
members include Total Wine & More, BevMo! by Gopuff, ABC Fine Wine &
Spirits, Spec’s Wine and Spirits & Finer Foods, as well as a group of hemp
product wholesalers.

“We know how to sell regulated products,” BAMCO spokesman Jonathan Grella
said in a press release. “We do it every day.”

The coalition is calling on lawmakers to pass recently introduced
legislation, the Hemp Planting Predictability Act, that would give the hemp
industry two more years before a federal ban on THC products would take
effect—which stakeholders hope will better position them to negotiate a
broader regulatory compromise.

The law is currently set to become effective this November.

“This coalition is here to help policymakers land in the right place—with a
pragmatic, responsible approach that voters already understand and support.
We’re creating the space for smart regulation by showing broad alignment
among consumers, merchants, and experienced operators,” Grella said.

BAMCO launches today: Top alcohol merchants united for responsible federal
regulation of low-dose adult-use hemp beverages.
We know how to sell regulated products—we do it every day—using the proven
three-tier system for safe, transparent access.⁰Read:
https://t.co/PHhNDlX8VF

— Jonathan Grella (@JonathanGrella) January 21, 2026

“This isn’t about delay for delay’s sake—it’s about doing it right,” he
said. “The polling is clear. Every day Americans want these products.
Businesses want clarity and consistency. And regulators already have a
model that works—the three-tier alcohol system.”

The coalition says it wants to apply the same regulatory structure that
governs beverage alcohol producers, distributors and merchants to hemp
drinks “to ensure safe, transparent access.”

Other alcohol industry groups such as Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America
have also backed regulating hemp products instead of prohibiting them.

BAMCO, for its part, says its regulatory priorities include limiting sales
to adults over 21, having THC serving limits, mandating testing and
labeling, ensuring responsible marketing and directing tax revenue to fund
enforcement efforts. It also wants to have a multi-tier system of
distribution through licensed retailers and wholesalers while giving states
“flexibility layered over a clear federal framework.”

The post Alcohol Retailers Push Congress To Delay Hemp THC Ban While
Regulations Are Crafted appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

Recent Reviews

bottom of page