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California Governor Signs Bill To Expedite Marijuana And Psychedelics Research
Oct 13, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
California’s governor has signed a bill aimed at streamlining research on
marijuana and psychedelics.
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Friday gave final approval to the measure that
empowers the Research Advisory Panel of California (RAPC) to expedite
reviews of study proposals on Schedule I and Schedule II controlled
substances, through January 2028.
The newly enacted legislation, sponsored by Assemblymember Christopher Ward
(D), will also authorize RAPC’s chair to assign two or more members of the
body to conduct expedited reviews of research proposals and approve them on
behalf of the panel.
It will also allow “individual panel members to communicate and consult
asynchronously with other individual panel members with complementary core
competencies outside of full panel meetings to conduct their individual
reviews,” a summary of the legislation states.
The overall intent of the bill is to facilitate studies to determine
whether marijuana, psychedelics or other Schedule I or Schedule II drugs
can be utilized “to treat opioid use disorders, traumatic brain injury,
post-traumatic stress disorder, and other mental health conditions fueling
the disproportionate incidence of suicide among California veterans,” the
summary says.
“Eliminating any and all unnecessary delays in commencing such clinical
research in California will save lives,” it says.
A leading veterans group had called on Newsom to sign the legislation after
it was sent to his desk by lawmakers.
Veterans Exploring Treatment Solutions (VETS) said in an action alert last
month that the bill will “cut through red tape and expedite approval for
psychedelic research projects at California’s world-class institutions.”
“These studies will not only benefit veterans in California but will ripple
across the nation, changing lives, advancing science, and offering hope
where it’s desperately needed,” VETS said.
Newsom did not comment on the legislation when signing it into law along
with other unrelated bills.
The measure’s passage comes more than a year after the governor signed a
separate bill that’s similarly meant to streamline the processing of
applications to study psychedelics and marijuana.
That legislation from Assemblymember Marie Waldron (R) was meant to help
clear a logjam of psychedelics study applications overseen by RAPC.
Members had previously decided to suspend their activities because they
were prohibited under existing law from publicly disclosing applicants’
trade secrets and other confidential information. To resolve the issue, the
bill reauthorized the panel to carry out their duties in closed-door
meetings, freeing them up to process the backlog.
The newly signed bill from this session extends the panel’s exemptions from
open meetings laws to January 1, 2028.
*— Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug
policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon
supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps,
charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.*
*Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on
Patreon to get access. —*
Last month the governor signed a bill into law to put a pause on a recently
enacted tax hike on marijuana products.
California officials are also inviting research proposals for a second
round of grants under a program meant to better educate the public on the
state’s marijuana law and help policymakers make informed decisions on the
issue.
In June, the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development
(GO-Biz) announced the recipients of over $52 million in community
reinvestment grants to nonprofits and local health departments, also funded
by marijuana tax revenue.
That marked the seventh round of cannabis-funded California Community
Reinvestment Grants (CalCRG) under the state program.
Legalization in California has created a number of new grant programs aimed
at addressing the consequences of marijuana prohibition and attempting to
nurture a strong, well-regulated legal industry.
California’s Supreme Court separately delivered a victory for the state’s
marijuana program in June, rescinding a lower court ruling in a case that
suggested federal prohibition could be used locally to undermine the
cannabis market.
The state Supreme Court ruling also came just weeks after California
officials unveiled a report on the current status and future of the state’s
marijuana market—with independent analysts hired by regulators concluding
that the federal prohibition on cannabis that prevents interstate commerce
is meaningfully bolstering the illicit market.
The governor did sign a bill in 2022 that would have empowered him to enter
into interstate cannabis commerce agreements with other legal states, but
that power was incumbent upon federal guidance or an assessment from the
state attorney general that sanctioned such activity.
Meanwhile, a California Senate committee recently declined to advance a
bipartisan bill that would have created a psilocybin pilot program for
military veterans and former first responders.
*Image element courtesy of Kristie Gianopulos.*
The post California Governor Signs Bill To Expedite Marijuana And
Psychedelics Research appeared first on Marijuana Moment.













