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...
Hawaii Governor Signals Veto Of Medical Marijuana Expansion Bill, Calling One Provision A ‘Grave Violation Of Privacy’
Jun 9, 2025
Ben Adlin
Marijuana Moment
Hawaii Gov. Josh Green (D) has signaled his intent to veto a controversial
marijuana bill that would have allowed patients to enroll in the state’s
medical cannabis program for any health condition their doctor sees fit—but
which critics warned also raised serious privacy concerns.
Initially intended to expand access to medical marijuana, HB 302 would
allow patients to receive recommend medical cannabis recommendations
through telehealth visits rather than having to establish an in-person
relationship with a provider.
But lawmakers on a conference committee revised the plan, inserting a
provision to allow the state Department of Health to access medical
marijuana patient records held by doctors for any reason whatsoever—what
Green called “a grave violation of privacy.”
On Friday, the governor included the bill as one of 19 measures on his
intent-to-veto list, though he has until July 9 to decide whether in fact
to reject the bills.
“This administration remains committed to Hawai‘i’s existing medical
cannabis program and supports efforts to expand access to medical cannabis
for any medical condition,” the governor’s office said in a statement.
“Although this bill’s authorization of medical cannabis certifications via
telehealth expands access to medical cannabis, provisions authorizing the
inspection of patients’ medical records without warrant constitute a grave
violation of privacy.”
Green acknowledged patients might be especially concerned about removing
privacy protections given that marijuana remains federally illegal, noting
that those concerns could actually limit enrollment in the state-legal
system.
“Given that the federal government classifies cannabis as a Schedule I
substance,” his office said, “patients’ reasonable fears of repercussions
based upon information gained from inspection of their personal medical
records may deter patients from participating in the medical cannabis
program.”
@GovJoshGreenMD, today informed legislative leaders and stakeholders of his
intent to veto 19 bills passed during the 2025 regular session of the
Hawai‘i State Legislature.https://t.co/cP7JJ5XLnZ
— Office of the Governor, State of Hawai`i (@GovHawaii) June 7, 2025
Some lawmakers warned at the time of the conference committee change that
the medical records provision would be an issue.
“The medical cannabis community has expressed its opposition to this breach
of confidentiality,” Rep. Kim Coco Iwamoto (D) said last month, “especially
since it is authorized without any suspicion of wrongdoing and without a
warrant. This will further deter already low patient and provider
participation.”
She called the proposal “unprecedented given the degree of respect our
state has previously demonstrated for patient–doctor privileges, and how
often the state defers to the expertise of physicians and healthcare
providers.”
Reform advocates initially supported HB 302 as a means to expand access to
patients with conditions beyond those specified under state law. But most
withdrew support following the conference committee revisions.
Specifically, the revised bill authorized the Department of Health to
“inspect a qualifying patient’s medical records held by the physician,
advanced practice registered nurse, or hospice provider who issued a
written certification for the qualifying patient.”
Providers who didn’t comply with a department request for a patient’s
records could have seen their ability to issue medical cannabis revoked.
Another change would establish a new Class C felony for unlicensed
operation of a dispensary, adding another major charge on top of the
state’s existing laws against illegal distribution of marijuana.
Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies for Marijuana Policy Project,
said on Monday that the group was “encouraged to see HB 302 on Gov. Green’s
list of bills he may veto.”
“While we strongly support allowing medical cannabis certifications by
telehealth and trusting doctors to certify cannabis for any medical
condition, the revised bill does more harm than good,” she told Marijuana
Moment in an email. “It would allow the health department to snoop in
medical cannabis patients’ medical records absent any allegation of
wrongdoing while siphoning off $750,000 from the medical cannabis fund for
six new enforcement agents targeting cannabis and hemp.”
She also noted that unlike an earlier version of the bill, the form
approved by the bicameral conference committee limited which doctors could
recommend marijuana to patients for conditions not explicitly listed.
“The conference committee bill also dramatically weakened HB 302’s vital
provision allowing physicians and [advanced practice registered nurses] to
certify medical cannabis for any medical condition, making it close to
ineffectual by limiting it to primary treating medical providers.”
O’Keefe has said in the past that in Hawaii, only “about 6% of actively
treating physicians are recommending medical cannabis… So in practice, the
vast majority of patients have to go to a specialist for their medical
cannabis recommendation.”
The provision could have also complicated the process of obtaining a
medical marijuana recommendation for patients without a primary care
physician, veterans whose primary care doctors work for the federal
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and others.
Other measures recently sent to the governor’s desk include SB 1429, which
would allow medical marijuana caregivers to grow marijuana on behalf of up
to five patients rather than the current one. Green signed that bill late
last month.
Lawmakers also recently sent a bill to the governor that would help speed
the expungement process for people hoping to clear their records of past
marijuana-related offenses—a proposal Green signed into law in April.
That measure, HB 132, from Rep. David Tarnas (D), is intended to expedite
expungements happening through a pilot program signed into law last year by
Gov. Josh Green (D). Specifically, it will remove a distinction between
marijuana and other Schedule V drugs for the purposes of the expungement
program.
The bill’s proponents said the current wording of the law forces state
officials to comb through thousands of criminal records manually in order
to identify which are eligible for expungement under the pilot program.
Hawaii’s Senate back in February narrowly defeated a separate proposal that
would have increased fivefold the amount of cannabis that a person could
possess without risk of criminal charges. The body voted 12–11 against the
decriminalization measure, SB 319, from Sen. Joy San Buenaventura (D).
Had the measure become law, it would have increased the amount of cannabis
decriminalized in Hawaii from the current 3 grams up to 15 grams.
Possession of any amount of marijuana up to that 15-gram limit would have
been classified as a civil violation, punishable by a fine of $130.
A Senate bill that would have legalized marijuana for adults, meanwhile,
ultimately stalled for the session. That measure, SB 1613, failed to make
it out of committee by a legislative deadline.
While advocates felt there was sufficient support for the legalization
proposal in the Senate, it’s widely believed that House lawmakers would
have ultimately scuttled the measure, as they did last month with a
legalization companion bill, HB 1246.
Last session, a Senate-passed legalization bill also fizzled out in the
House.
This year’s House vote to stall the bill came just days after approval from
a pair of committees at a joint hearing. Ahead of that hearing, the panels
received nearly 300 pages of testimony, including from state agencies,
advocacy organizations and members of the public.
This past fall, regulators solicited proposals to assess the state’s
current medical marijuana program—and also sought to estimate demand for
recreational sales if the state eventually moves forward with adult-use
legalization. Some read the move as a sign the regulatory agency saw a need
to prepare to the potential reform.
Federal Health Officials ‘Rejected’ DEA’s Request To Testify At Marijuana
Rescheduling Hearing, Agency Tells Judge
*Photo courtesy of Philip Steffan.*
The post Hawaii Governor Signals Veto Of Medical Marijuana Expansion Bill,
Calling One Provision A ‘Grave Violation Of Privacy’ appeared first on Marijuana
Moment.