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...
Ohio Legislature Can Make Only Limited Changes To Marijuana Law Approved By Voters, Legal Scholar Argues
Jun 11, 2025
Ben Adlin
Marijuana Moment
As Ohio lawmakers face public pushback over legislation that would make
sweeping changes to the state marijuana law approved by voters in 2023, one
legal scholar says the state Constitution could ultimately limit how
drastic those adjustments could be.
“When you look closely at the text, the structure and the history of the
Ohio Constitution’s statutory initiative provision, it strongly suggests
that the Constitution places real limits on the General Assembly’s power to
alter initiated laws,” Derek Clinger, a staff attorney at the University of
Wisconsin Law School’s State Democracy Research Initiative, said at a
webinar Tuesday.
“Now, to be clear, I don’t think the Constitution completely prohibits the
legislature from making changes,” Clinger added, “though I actually think
there’s a better argument for that position than for the one that says the
lawmakers have complete discretion to change initiatives.”
Clinger’s comments were part of an online talk hosted by Ohio State
University law school’s Drug Enforcement and Policy Center, titled
(Un)Checked Power of the Ohio General Assembly: Can Legislators Override
Voters’ Will on Marijuana Reform? In it, speakers described how legislative
efforts this session have sought to undercut many of the provisions passed
by voters in the state’s 2023 legalization law, Issue 2.
Advocates have criticized the legislation—SB 56 and its House counterpart,
HB 160—as restrictive measures that would undermine the will of voters.
“There’s been an assumption that the General Assembly has the complete
discretion to change or even fully repeal the initiative,” Clinger said.
But the state Constitution “does not address this scenario in explicit
terms,” and state courts “have never actually weighed in on this issue.”
The state Constitution’s section on initiative power is “a reservation of
legislative power by the people of Ohio to the people of Ohio,” he
asserted. “It did not come from the General Assembly. And the effect is
that the General Assembly is in, really, a power-sharing arrangement with
the people of Ohio when it comes to lawmaking.”
The Constitution doesn’t say specifically whether lawmakers can amend
voter-approved initiatives, though it does spell out a process for the
legislature to adopt or offer alternatives to public proposals *before* a
matter goes to voters. It also sets limits, such as around the scope of a
proposal—the so-called “single subject” rule—and on certain tax issues.
“What this shows to me is that the framers of the provision knew how to
write clear limits on the power,” Clinger explained, “yet they didn’t
expressly say that the General Assembly would be free to change or even
repeal initiated law after an election.”
In further language about initiatives, the Constitution says that laws “may
be passed to facilitate their operation but in no way limiting or
restricting either such provisions or the powers herein reserved,” he added.
“This anti-subversion clause seems to most directly address the scenario of
whether legislators can amend or repeal voter approved initiatives,”
Clinger said. “They can, but only if the change facilitates the initiative
without in any way limiting or restricting it.”
Clinger’s interpretation is the subject of a forthcoming Case Western
Reserve Law Review article about the constitutional limits on legislative
changes to initiatives in Ohio, a version of which was posted online in
April.
Another speaker at the webinar, Patrick Higgins, policy council at ACLU of
Ohio, said that even some lawmakers have raised concerns that certain
pieces of the legislation “might be unconstitutional or unimplementable.”
“But the common refrain in the Statehouse is, ‘It’s called the revised code
for a reason. We can make tweaks to it,'” Higgins said.
“I think the message has been resoundingly clear,” he continued: “This is
not what voters wanted.”
Already the House Judiciary Committee has taken steps to soften the
restrictive bill, SB 56, in response to public pushback. Changes approved
at a hearing late last month, for example rolled back some of the strict
limits included in a verson of the measure passed by the Senate in February,
including a criminal prohibition on sharing marijuana between adults on
private property.
Members said at the time that further amendments to the plan were
forthcoming.
Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies for the advocacy group Marijuana
Policy Project (MPP), said at Tuesday’s webinar that the bill “still has a
lot of alarming provisions but is not quite as terrible as the initial
proposal.”
“The proposal started out way more extreme in terms of recriminalization,
hiking up taxes and removing all the allocations that were included in
issue two,” she noted, such as for local governments, social equity and
jobs training.
The amended version of the bill, O’Keefe added, has “less
recriminalization,” though it would still outlaw marijuana that wasn’t
purchased from an Ohio retailer or grown at home, and it would prohibit the
sharing of homegrown cannabis between adults.
“If you just couldn’t prove where your cannabis came from, it would open
the door to those kind of interrogations,” she said. “You could also only
share cannabis that was purchased… People that are helping their neighbors
with serious illnesses couldn’t do that anymore, and if they shared more
than 20 grams, they’d face a felony for doing so.”
The revised bill also earmarks 25 percent of revenue for local
governments—higher than the legislation’s initial 20 percent but lower than
the 36 percent allocation approved by voters. And it does away entirely
with a voter-approved social equity and jobs program.
As for Clinger’s argument that the changes could be unconstitutional,
O’Keefe said she understood that matters such as recriminalization of
cannabis conduct or removal of voter-passed funding allocations “are both
vulnerable under such an analysis,” but she added that she has “become
cynical of some courts in the last decade, few years, so I think it’s
important to fight it out with the legislature first.”
Rep. Jamie Callender (R), a longtime supporter of cannabis reform,
reassured speakers at a follow-up hearing last week that their concerns
were being heard and that further amendments are on the way.
“Thank you all for your participation,” he said. “As a result of that,
there was a substitute bill put in last week that addressed a couple of the
issues you talk about. And one of the reasons that it is not up for a vote
today is we are still negotiating and working on some amendments to address
several of the other issues.”
“The very specific issues you addressed have been being worked on or will
be addressed in the next week or two,” he continued. “So for all of you
that are here testifying, I want to thank you. You’ve made a difference.
And it’s going to make a much better product. And I’m optimistic that you
may not be perfectly happy, but you’re going to say, ‘You know, this is
OK,’ when it comes up.”
New changes already adopted would remove the legislation’s earlier criminal
penalty for sharing marijuana or intoxicating hemp products among adults,
provided that the sharing takes place on private property. Certain outdoor
concert venues would also be exempt from laws against open consumption
provided they have separate smoking and vaping areas.
The committee amendment also removed a provision that would have created a
mandatory minimum sentence for someone caught consuming marijuana in the
passenger seat of a vehicle.
Notably under the amended bill, THC-infused beverages containing up to five
milligrams of THC could be carried in stores statewide rather than just in
dispensaries. A $3.50 per gallon tax would be levied on THC beverages.
A separate 10 percent tax on marijuana products in the bill would also
apply to intoxicating hemp products.
While especially high-potency products would still be forbidden under the
amended bill, regulators at the Division of Marijuana Control could by rule
increase the allowable potency above the initial 70-percent THC cap.
Licensed dispensaries would also be able to sell and transfer marijuana to
other license holders.
Other changes increased the amount of tax revenue going to municipalities
that host cannabis businesses, upping it to 25 percent of state cannabis
revenue for a period of seven years. That’s a higher amount than was
contemplated in any other marijuana bill this session.
In March, a survey of 38 municipalities by the Ohio State University’s
(OSU) Moritz College of Law found that local leaders were “unequivocally
opposed” to earlier proposals that would have stripped the planned funding.
Rep. Brian Stewart (R) noted at the previous committee hearing that the
latest provision around host community funding was the most generous
lawmakers had offered all session.
“The Senate’s version of the bill was zero percent. The governor’s
introduced version of the bill was zero percent,” he said, adding that HB
160 itself initially set a 20-percent allocation for five years. “We have
increased that to 25 percent over seven years.”
Ohio’s Senate president has pushed back against public criticism of the
Senate bill, claiming the legislation does not disrespect the will of the
electorate and would have little impact on products available in stores.
Meanwhile in Ohio, adults are now able to buy more than double the amount
of marijuana than they were under previous limits, with state officials
determining that the market can sustainably supply both medical cannabis
patients and adult consumers.
Effective earlier this month, adults can purchase up to 2.5 ounces of
flower cannabis per day—a significant increase compared to the prior daily
transaction limit of one ounce. The change will make it so consumers could
buy marijuana in an amount that matches the 2.5 ounce possession limit
under state statute.
A Department of Commerce spokesperson told Marijuana Moment that “back when
the non-medical program came online, there were lower limits on non-medical
sales, which was primarily to help ensure there was an adequate supply for
medical patients.”
“A subsequent review of the available inventory data supports this increase
adjustment up to the statutory limits identified in the statute,” they said.
Meanwhile, Gov. Mike DeWine (R) in March announced his desire to reallocate
marijuana tax revenue to support police training, local jails and
behavioral health services in a state budget bill. He said funding police
training was a top priority, even if that wasn’t included in what voters
passed in 2023.
Separately in the legislature this month, Sens. Steve Huffman (R) and Shane
Wilkin (R) introduced legislation that would impose a 15 percent tax on
intoxicating hemp products and limit their sales to adult-use dispensaries—not
convenience stores, smoke shops or gas stations
DeWine has repeatedly asked lawmakers to regulate or ban intoxicating hemp
products such as delta-8 THC.
GOP-Led Congressional Panel Demands Investigation On Biden’s Marijuana
Rescheduling Process, Citing ‘Deviations’ And ‘Mental Health Hazards’
*Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.*
The post Ohio Legislature Can Make Only Limited Changes To Marijuana Law
Approved By Voters, Legal Scholar Argues appeared first on Marijuana Moment.