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New Hampshire Lawmakers Approve Bill To Let Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Convert To For-Profit Businesses
Oct 3, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
New Hampshire lawmakers have advanced a bill to allow medical marijuana
dispensaries in the state to convert from from non-profit organizations to
for-profit businesses.
After clearing an initial committee and then passing the full House of
Representatives in March, the legislation from Rep. Wendy Thomas (D)
returned to the House Finance Committee under rules for measures with
fiscal implications. A subcommittee of that panel unanimously approved the
proposal in a 9-0 vote on Thursday.
Rep. Carol McGuire (R) noted the near unanimity of support in the chamber
as the legislation has moved through the process—with a fiscal note that
showed a $13,000 cost estimate to implement the law that narrowly rose to
the occasion of triggering a Finance Committee review.
“This is something that will let the alternative treatment centers operate
more efficiently and, with any luck, will lower the cost to our medical
cannabis users. So I’m in strong support,” she said.
Part of the motivation behind the legislation is the fact that medical
marijuana dispensaries, called alternative treatment centers (ATCs) under
New Hampshire law, don’t qualify for federal non-profit status. But in the
state, they’re considered non-profit organizations, which has resulted in
disproportionately increased operating costs.
Advocates say those costs are then passed on to patients, necessitating the
policy change. And they also argue that the current policy is pushing
adults outside of the New Hampshire program, with many purchasing products
in surrounding states with legal cannabis programs.
“It’s encouraging to see that this issue continues to enjoy strong,
bipartisan support in the House,” Matt Simon, director of public and
government relations at the medical marijuana provider GraniteLeaf
Cannabis, told Marijuana Moment. “The current business structure
requirement for ATCs makes no sense and does not benefit patients in any
way.”
(Disclosure: Simon supports Marijuana Moment’s work with a monthly pledge
on Patreon.)
Similar legislation has advanced through both chambers in recent sessions
but was vetoed by the governor. In 2019, a proposal passed the House and
Senate, but a veto override attempt failed by just one vote in the Senate.
In 2022, the override attempt failed by a single vote in the House.
Sen. Daniel Innis (R) has signaled his intent to file a bill in the Senate
on the issue for the 2026 session.
Meanwhile, a New Hampshire House committee recently discussed plans to move
forward with a bill to legalize marijuana altogether–even though members
accept that it is unlikely to advance beyond the chamber given opposition
in the Senate and the threat of a veto by the governor.
*— 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. —*
“We know where it’s going to go. Let’s send a virtue signal,” the sponsor
of the legalization proposal, Rep. Jared Sullivan (D), said during a House
Commerce and Consumer Affairs Committee hearing last month. “Let them be
the ones that are pissing off voters who care about this.”
Sullivan ultimately made a persuasive defense of moving forward with his
original bill, pointing out that the House has repeatedly passed similar
legalization legislation and that the chamber should stand its ground,
forcing the Senate and governor to again go on record with their opposition
to a policy popular among voters.
Meanwhile, after the House added provisions to a Senate-passed bill that
would allow medical marijuana patients to grow cannabis at home, those
measures were stripped in conference.
Gov. Kelly Ayotte (R) also said in August that her position on marijuana
legalization would not change even if the federal government moved forward
with rescheduling the plant—a policy change President Donald Trump is
actively considering.
“If federal law changes, I have to comply with federal law,” Ayotte said.
“But my position has been, and continues to be, that we should not legalize
marijuana in the future.”
The post New Hampshire Lawmakers Approve Bill To Let Medical Marijuana
Dispensaries Convert To For-Profit Businesses appeared first on Marijuana
Moment.













