Menu
Washington DC
DC Dispensaries
DC Weed Reviews
DC Medical Reviews
DC Delivery Services
How to Buy Weed in DC
I-71 Information
History of Legal Weed in DC
DC Medical Marijuana Guide
Virginia
Find the BEST weed in...
As Ohio’s Intoxicating Hemp Product Ban Takes Effect, Business Owners Brace For Impact
Oct 14, 2025
Marijuana Moment
Marijuana Moment
*“To see the governor and members of the legislature be anti-business on
this front is very concerning when other states have been able to figure
this out.”*
*By Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal*
Ohioans who sell intoxicating hemp products are worried what the 90-day ban
that goes into effect on Tuesday will mean for their businesses and
customers.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) recently announced a 90-day executive order that
bans the sale of intoxicating hemp products that starts October 14.
Intoxicating hemp products are items that contain THC that are sold
anywhere other than licensed marijuana dispensaries including gas stations,
smoke shops and CBD stores, among others.
Todd Hicks opened his new CBD store in Columbus days before DeWine
announced the ban.
“It’s been heartbreaking,” he said. “Honestly, it’s been totally
heartbreaking. I don’t know which direction to go.”
Hicks said he will likely have to close his new shop and let go of his
three employees.
“I can’t afford them,” he said. “Well, there’s nothing for them to do,
right? They can’t sell the product. There’s no one going to be answering
the door or coming to the door to actually buy the product. So I don’t need
them.”
Children getting ahold of intoxicating hemp products is a parental issue,
Hicks said.
“They’re digging it out of their parents’ purse or something like that,” he
said. “It’s not a sale issue.”
Mark Fashian, president of hemp product wholesaler Midwest Analytical
Solutions in Delaware, Ohio, said the ban will put him out of business. He
works with more than 500 stores around Ohio that sell intoxicating hemp
products.
“We typically will sell to smoke shops or gas stations or convenience
stores or drive-thrus, and every one of those have a mechanism for carding
anyone,” Fashian said. “There is definitely carding happening all over the
place.”
He said those shops are worried about how the ban will impact them.
“They’re just worried,” Fashian said. “They don’t know what to do. They
don’t know what to do with their products.”
Jim Higdon, co-founder of Cornbread Hemp in Kentucky, which sells its
products in more than 300 Ohio retail stores, said the intoxicating hemp
ban has caused lots of confusion.
“Our retailer and distributor partners are very unhappy,” he said. “It’s
really frustrating to watch the Republican Party be an anti-business party…
To see the governor and members of the legislature be anti-business on this
front is very concerning when other states have been able to figure this
out.”
Kim Bryant, a salesperson at Your CBD Store Marion, said the average age of
their customer is 50 years old.
“They want gummies for pain and gummies for sleep,” she said. “People want
that instead of opioids or prescription drugs… The older people, they have
no desire to go to a medical marijuana or recreational marijuana facility.”
The store requires ID checks with every purchase, Bryant said.
“I would never, ever, sell anything to a minor,” she said. “I just feel
like it’s unfair to the people that are doing all the right things when
there’s one bad apple… This is a store that actually helps people.”
This ban includes THC-infused beverages, like the ones Collin Castore
started selling at his three central Ohio breweries in March. The beverages
contain five milligrams of THC.
“A five milligram beverage is literally the equivalent of taking a puff off
the average joint. It’s not rocking anyone’s world and throwing them into a
psychedelic experience, 24-hour head trip. It’s just a slight altering of
mood,” said Castore, who is the co-founder of Seventh Son Brewery, Antiques
on High and Getaway Brewing.
These beverages have no alcohol in them and are “tested extensively,” he
said.
“We want this to be regulated,” Castore said. “Let’s keep low-dose THC
beverages. Let’s just treat it the same as beer, and regulate it the same
as beer, and everybody gets tax revenue from it, and we get to create jobs.”
Castore said their target demographic with THC-infused beverages is 35 to
55 year old women who want to take a break from alcohol—“not 10-year-old
children.”
“I’ve really seen these beverages be a great way for some people who need
to take a break from alcohol still have a way to relax after work or have a
beverage with their friends and not feel excluded,” he said.
There is a label on the cans saying the drinks are only for people 21 and
older, and people are carded to purchase the beverages, just like alcohol,
Castore said.
The THC-infused beverages make up 10-15 percent of their wholesale business
and about 5 percent on the retail side, Castore said.
While it’s too early to put concrete numbers on how much revenue will be
lost because of the ban, he said it won’t be good for business.
“We’re gonna go from a year where we might have scraped by at breaking even
to a year where we’re probably gonna lose money again, and it’s really
frustrating,” Castore said.
The craft beer industry has faced challenges this year navigating tariffs
on aluminum, steel and malted barley.
“It just felt like we kind of had a win, and something that was working
really well finally, and it’s just been yanked out from under us,” he said.
Some people have turned to the THC-infused beverages as an alternative to
alcohol, Higdon said.
“People are looking to reduce their alcohol consumption or have gone sober
from alcohol and have found beverage products to be what they’re looking
for, and taking these products away from those folks is particularly
frustrating because they are gonna increase their alcohol consumption as a
result,” he said.
At least 32 states have some regulations on intoxicating hemp products.
*This story was first published by Ohio Capital Journal.*
The post As Ohio’s Intoxicating Hemp Product Ban Takes Effect, Business
Owners Brace For Impact appeared first on Marijuana Moment.













