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Indiana Senate Committee Passes Bill to Align State Hemp Laws With Forthcoming Federal Changes
Jan 20, 2026
TG Branfalt
Ganjapreneur
An Indiana bill to align state law with the forthcoming federal ban on
intoxicating hemp products last week passed the state Senate Commerce and
Technology Committee, the Indiana Capital Chronicle reports. The
legislation would also regulate less potent products allowed under the
federal reforms.
Cory Harris, representing the American Trade Association for Cannabis and
Hemp, told the committee that “it is imperative” that lawmakers act during
this session “to harmonize with federal policy” because “failure to do so
will mean that Indiana’s policy will be less stringent than federal law,
and therefore equate to Indiana being a legal cannabis market.”
Justin Swanson, representing the Midwest Hemp Council and 3Chi, a THC
product retailer, argued that the proposal is “premature” and that the
federal and state laws “will decimate an entire industry in the
state.” Swanson noted that “the landscape is still not settled,” as a
federal bill sponsored by Indiana Rep. Jim Baird (R) has proposed delaying
the ban’s rollout by two years.
Additionally, the law includes language that would prevent state law from
aligning with federal reclassification of cannabis, as President Donald
Trump (R) directed in an executive order last month.
State Sen. Aaron Freeman (R), the bill’s sponsor, said he’d like to
“eliminate all these things from the face of the planet, period.”
“This bill simply says that we would not automatically follow what the
federal government does, that we would decide, 150 of us – that we would
make that decision, not the federal government for us.” — Freeman during
the committee hearing via the Capital Chronicle
The Indiana proposal would also put the state’s Alcohol and Tobacco
Commission (ATC) in charge of regulating what remains of the industry:
implementing permits for manufacturers, distributers, retailers, and
carriers. Hemp businesses would also be banned from
advertising and operating within 1,000 feet of schools and playgrounds. The
bill would direct 70% of hemp-derived tax revenues to ATC administrative
efforts, 20% to enforcement, 5% to the state’s 988 suicide and crisis
hotline, and 5% to the general fund.
The bill heads next to the Appropriations Committee before being considered
by the full Senate.













