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North Carolina's governor supports legalizing marijuana and is forming a bipartisan commission to study the issue. The governor wants to regulate intoxicating hemp products to prevent youth access but believes adults should be able to buy cannabis. The council will explore regulatory models and make recommendations by May 15, 2026, with final recommendations due by December 31, 2026. The state's unregulated cannabis market is described as the "Wild West."

North Carolina Governor Backs Marijuana Legalization And Forms A Bipartisan Commission To Craft A Plan

Jun 4, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



The governor of North Carolina has come out in support of legalizing
marijuana and is convening a bipartisan commission to study the issue in
hopes of moving the GOP-controlled legislature to act on reform.

Gov. Josh Stein (D) said during an interview with WRAL News that was
published on Tuesday that he wants to see the largely unregulated market
for intoxicating hemp products reined in to prevent youth access and
support public safety—but believed that adults should be able to buy
cannabis products from licensed retailers.

“If you are an adult and that’s the choice you want to make, you should be
able to make that choice,” Stein said. “I do not have all of the answers. I
have some philosophical views on matters, but there are real, complicated,
practical implications of every decision you make.”

To navigate those complicated questions, the governor has issued an
executive order to create the North Carolina Advisory Council on
Cannabis—comprised of up to 30 members, including lawmakers, law
enforcement officials, agriculture industry stakeholders, health experts,
tribal representatives, advocates and others to explore possible regulatory
models for adult-use marijuana and hemp.

The order says there’s a need for reform because the “current lack of
regulation, including age, potency, and purity limitations, poses a threat
to all North Carolinians, particularly our youth.” And “rather than
allowing this unsafe and unregulated market to continue, smart and balanced
regulation presents an opportunity not only to protect the health and
well-being of our people, but also to generate revenue that can benefit our
state.”

The panel will be required to hold its first meeting in July and then
convene at least every other month through December 2026. Members will be
tasked with developing and submitting initial recommendations on a
“comprehensive cannabis policy, including any proposed legislation” to the
governor by May 15, 2026. Final recommendations will be due by December 31,
2026.

The report would need to look at youth prevention strategies, deterring
impaired driving, promoting public education around cannabis, supporting
criminal justice reforms such as expungements for people with prior records
and more.

“It’s really ironic that in some ways, the most liberal, pro-marijuana
adult-use state in the country is North Carolina,” he said, referencing the
currently unregulated consumable hemp market. “It’s not Colorado, it’s not
Massachusetts, it’s not these states that legalized it and then created a
regulatory structure to sell it. It’s North Carolina, where we have no
rules whatsoever.”

“It is the wild West out there,” he said. “The idea that we have a system
where this product—which is a drug that can get you high—is for sale out
there without any restrictions on how it’s sold, to me, is insane.”

Rather than sticking to the status quo, the governor said the state should
move to legalize marijuana for adults 21 and older. That would represent a
significant policy change for North Carolina, which is one of the rare
remaining examples of a state without a comprehensive medical cannabis
program.

“Our state’s unregulated cannabis market is the Wild West and is crying for
order,” Stein said in a press release on Wednesday. “Let’s get this right
and create a safe, legal market for adults that protects kids.”

“I want to thank members of the General Assembly for their interest in
addressing this gaping loophole in state law,” he said. “Let’s work
together on a thoughtful, comprehensive solution that allows sales to
adults and that is grounded in public safety and health. We can work
together and get this right.”

During his time as the state’s attorney general, Stein led a separate task
force under then-Gov. Roy Cooper (D) that examined racial injustice issues
and ultimately recommended decriminalizing marijuana and studying broader
legalization in response to racially disparate enforcement trends.

In recent sessions, multiple limited medical marijuana legalization bills
advanced through the Senate, only to stall out in the House.

But Stein is making the case that moving forward on comprehensive
recreational reform would help avoid issues that other states have
experienced transitioning from medical to adult-use marijuana markets.

“I’m aware of how different states have wrestled with it. I’ve heard from
regulators that the states that start with a medical marijuana system and
then come later with an adult recreational use system end up having pretty
irrational systems because the regulatory regime for one is very different
than the regulatory regime for the other,” the governor said in the WRAl
interview.

That position might put one of the advisory council’s appointed members,
Sen. Bill Rabon (R), in an awkward place, as the senator has long
championed bipartisan medical marijuana legalization legislation and
insisted it should not be viewed as a step toward adult-use legalization.

“I think we can have one system,” Stein said. “A cannabis control system
where we know what’s in the product so that people know what they can take
and what they can tolerate and what they can’t.”

“That’s why I’m bringing in folks from both parties, both chambers [to the
council],” the governor added, “so we can have a shared understanding of
what is happening, a shared appreciation for how other states are dealing
with it and then a shared strategy of what North Carolina should do.”

“Adults should be able to use cannabis with intoxicating THC if they want.
I do support that. But what I really support is making sure that kids
cannot buy it, and by law today in North Carolina, they can. That is
absolutely unacceptable to me.”

Another member of the committee will be Rep. John Bell (R), who is also
president of the hemp company Asterra Labs that produces consumable CBD
products.

Meanwhile, in the House, Rep. Aisha Dew (D) filed a bill in April that
would legalize medical marijuana for patients with a variety of specified
conditions, including cancer, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, Parkinson’s disease,
PTSD, end-of-life care and other serious ailments.

The North Carolina Compassionate Care Act is considerably more detailed
than a separate Democrat-led medical cannabis bill introduced earlier that
month that would allow access only for patients enrolled in a “registered
research study.”

Advocates had been awaiting House introduction of a comprehensive bill,
especially since Senate President Phil Berger (R) said his chamber is deferring
to the House to move first on medical marijuana reform this session.

Two other measures introduced so far this session would legalize cannabis
in North Carolina. In the Senate, S350 would create medical and adult-use
marijuana systems, while H413 in the House would legalize only recreational
marijuana.


*— 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. —*

House Speaker Destin Hall (R) said in early March that Republicans in his
chamber could be willing to consider medical marijuana legalization this
session. But he didn’t indicate any forthcoming House bills, instead
suggesting legislation would come from the Senate.

Voters, for their part, seem to be on board with cannabis reform. A poll
published in February found that 71 percent of likely voters in North
Carolina support legalizing medical marijuana in the state, with majorities
across party lines and in every surveyed demographic—aside from people over
the age of 80—in favor.

Former House Speaker Tim Moore (R) said last year that while he personally
supports legalizing medical marijuana, there is an informal rule in the
chamber that at least 37 GOP members must back any given bill in order to
bring it to the floor.

The current House speaker, Hall, has in the past voiced opposition to
medical cannabis reform.

Former House Majority Leader John Bell (R) said in 2023 that while there
were “still discussions going on” about medical marijuana legislation, he
was “very sure you won’t see that bill move” due to insufficient support
among Republicans. He said that was “unfortunately” the case.

An Indian tribe in North Carolina launched the state’s first medical
marijuana dispensary last April—despite the protests of certain Republican
congressional lawmakers. More than a week after legal marijuana sales
kicked off to all adults at The Great Smoky Cannabis Co. in Cherokee last
year, thousands from across the region made purchases.

Maine Senate Passes Psilocybin Bill That Would Legalize Possession, But Not
Sales, Of The Psychedelic

*Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.*

The post North Carolina Governor Backs Marijuana Legalization And Forms A
Bipartisan Commission To Craft A Plan appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

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