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The Natural Medicine Alliance of Idaho has collected over 73,000 signatures for a medical cannabis legalization initiative, exceeding the statewide requirement for the November ballot. Activists continue to gather signatures to meet regional distribution requirements before the May 1 deadline.

Idaho Medical Marijuana Initiative Exceeds Statewide Signature Count To Make November Ballot, Campaign Reports

Mar 20, 2026

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



An Idaho campaign says it’s collected enough signatures for a medical
cannabis legalization initiative to exceed the statewide threshold for
ballot qualification.

But because it’s unclear how many are valid and whether activists have met
a separate requirement for regional distribution of petitions, the Natural
Medicine Alliance of Idaho (NMAI) is continuing to hold signature gathering
events across the state to widen their coalition of supporters in the
run-up to the May 1 submission deadline.

As of Friday, NMAI has collected more than 73,000 signatures
total—exceeding the 70,725 statewide requirement for valid
petitions—according to the campaign’s website.

To be certified for the ballot, the team also needs to submit signatures
from 6 percent of registered voters from at least 18 of the state’s 35
legislative districts. Marijuana Moment reached out to NMAI for a status
update about their progress to that end, but a representative was not
immediately available.

Meanwhile, teams of paid and volunteer petitioners are being deployed
throughout the state to target high-traffic areas to gather signatures, and
NMAI’s website features a map showing where registered voters can go to
sign.



The Idaho Medical Cannabis Act, which NMAI unveiled last October, would
provide patients with qualifying conditions access to marijuana from a
limited number of dispensaries and provide a regulatory framework for the
market.

*Here are the main provisions of the Idaho Medical Cannabis Act:*

- Health practitioners would be able to recommend medical cannabis to
patients with conditions that include, but are not limited to, cancer,
anxiety and acute pain.
- Medical marijuana patients or their designated caregiver could
purchase up to 113 grams of smokeable cannabis, or 20 grams of THC extract
for vaping, per month.
- The state would be start by issuing three vertically integrated
cannabis business licenses, after which point it could license up to six
total.
- Marijuana would be reclassified under state law as a Schedule II,
rather than Schedule I, controlled substance.
- State and local law enforcement would be barred from assisting in
federal drug enforcement activities related to the state-legal cannabis
program.
- There would be anti-discrimination protections for those who use or
sell marijuana in compliance from state law, preventing adverse actions by
employers, landlords and educational institutions.
- It does not appear that there would be any equity-centered reforms,
nor would the initiative provide for a home grow option.

“We believe Idahoans deserve access to legal, compassionate, natural care
right here at home,” NMAI’s website says. “Our mission is to give patients
a legal pathway to natural medicine that can ease suffering and restore
dignity without the fear of addiction.”

“The Idaho Medical Cannabis Act is our first step forward. It creates a
safe, tightly regulated medical program that allows qualified Idahoans to
seek medical cannabis treatment with a valid diagnosis from a healthcare
provider,” it says. “It supports Idaho agriculture, generates tax revenue
to reinvest locally, and ensures that patients can find natural relief.”

The campaign last month also released the results of a statewide poll showing
that 83 percent of likely voters back medical cannabis legalization,
including 74 percent of Republicans, 95 percent of Democrats and 92 percent
of independents.

Asked how they would vote if the current medical cannabis legalization does
appear on the November ballot, 76 percent of respondents said “yes.” Of
that cohort, 50 percent said they would “definitively” vote yes, and just
21 percent said they’d vote “no.”

After the medical cannabis initiative was unveiled last year, a separate
campaign that launched in 2024, Kind Idaho, told supporters that it would
be suspending its own signature gathering for a ballot initiative to
legalize the personal possession and cultivation of marijuana by adults.

Kind Idaho previously introduced medical marijuana ballot measures intended
to go before voters in both the 2022 and 2024 elections, but the efforts
proved unsuccessful.

Meanwhile, voters this year will see a different kind of proposal on the
ballot: A constitutional amendment that the legislature approved to make it
so only lawmakers could legalize marijuana or other controlled substances.


*— 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. —*

Legislators separately held a hearing last March to discuss a bill to enact
medical cannabis legalization legislatively, but there hasn’t been
meaningful action on the issue in the months since.

Separately, a bill from Rep. Bruce Skaug (R) last year would have set a
$420 mandatory minimum fine for cannabis possession, removing judges’
discretion to apply lower penalties. Skaug said the bill, which ultimately
stalled in committee, would send the message that Idaho is tough on
marijuana.

House lawmakers also passed a bill to ban marijuana advertisements, though
the Senate later defeated the measure.

The post Idaho Medical Marijuana Initiative Exceeds Statewide Signature
Count To Make November Ballot, Campaign Reports appeared first on Marijuana
Moment.

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