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Oklahoma activists are in the final weeks of collecting signatures for a 2026 marijuana legalization initiative, needing 172,993 signatures by November 3. The campaign, Oklahomans for Responsible Cannabis Action (ORCA), has over 500 retail partners acting as signing locations. The initiative aims to allow adults 21 and older to possess and grow cannabis, protect legal cannabis users from various penalties, prevent local bans on home cultivation, establish a 10 percent excise tax on adult-use marijuana, and eliminate the tax on medical marijuana for registered patients. The revenue from the excise tax would be distributed among the state general fund, county governments, and municipal governments. The initiative also includes provisions for interstate commerce if federal law changes.

Oklahoma Marijuana Campaign In ‘Home Stretch’ For 2026 Legalization Initiative, With Under Three Weeks To Collect Signatures

Oct 15, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



Oklahoma activists are in the “home stretch” to collect enough signatures
to put a marijuana legalization initiative on the state’s 2026 ballot, with
just under three weeks left to go before a critical deadline.

Key to the campaign’s signature gathering operation are partnerships with
retailers across the state—from existing medical cannabis dispensaries to
tattoo parlors—that are carrying the petitions. Jed Green, founder of
Oklahomans for Responsible Cannabis Action (ORCA), tells Marijuana Moment
that there are now more than 500 locations lending their support by serving
as signing locations.

“A lot of folks are doubling down on their efforts,” he said. “We’re hoping
to be able to do some things to try to drive voter and consumer traffic to
those locations, as well as get out to a lot of the public events that
happen in the fall. So we’ve been out working on those as well.”

ORCA will need to submit the required 172,993 signatures by November 3,
after which point the secretary of state’s office will need to validate
them. Then there will be a 90-day window for any legal challenges to the
measure. If the campaign clears that barrier, it will appear on the ballot.

While the campaign hasn’t been actively verifying signatures it’s collected
so far due to the “decentralized” nature of the effort, with a largely
volunteer base of petitioners and retail partners, Green said “we’ve got
some pretty big piles” of signed petitions on hand at this point.

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“Simply put, as we enter into the home stretch, it’s vital that our people
reach out to their friends, to their family, and simply work to get
everyone together,” he said. “We know that we have the votes here. It’s
simply the logistical lift of getting them all together. So the more folks
can do to reach out to their family and friends, get them to sign, the
better off we’ll be.”

The turnaround to get the signatures delivered is tight, as the campaign
only started collecting them in August and is quickly approaching the early
November turn-in deadline.

There are challenges unique to this election cycle, as earlier this year
Gov. Kevin Stitt (R) gave final approval to legislation that some advocates
worry will inhibit future citizen-led policy changes, including cannabis
reform.

The law puts additional requirements on initiative “gist” language that
voters see on the ballot and also revise policies around signature
gathering to make it so petitioners could only submit signatures from up to
11.5 percent of registered voters in a single county for statutory
proposals and 20.8 percent for constitutional measures. The law is
currently being litigated for reasons unrelated to the specific cannabis
proposal.

Green previously said that one of the key differences between the initiative
his organization is pushing and a previous one that failed at the ballot
in 2023 is that it accounts for concerns about licensing rules. Many have
criticized the rollout of the state’s medical marijuana law, which led to a
dramatic proliferation of dispensaries, and Green said the failed adult-use
measure effectively duplicated that licensing scheme.

*Here’s what ORCA’s latest marijuana legalization initiative would
accomplish:*

- It would allow adults 21 and older to purchase and possess up to eight
ounces of cannabis for personal use. They could also grow up to 12 plants
and possess what’s harvested, and they would be able to have up to one
ounce of cannabis concentrates.
- The proposed constitutional amendment would also provide that Oklahoma
banks would not be penalized simply for servicing state-licensed cannabis
businesses.
- Further, the initiative includes protections to make it so any adults
would be shielded from being penalized with respect to “healthcare,
housing, employment, public assistance, public benefit, parental right,
educational opportunity, extracurricular activity” and also “licensure or
licensed activity” such as firearm ownership and driving rights due to any
legal cannabis activity.
- As part of those protections, the presence of THC metabolites in a
person’s system could not be used as evidence of impairment.
- Local governments would not be permitted to impose bans on the
marijuana home cultivation, and any regulations they set on the activity
could not be “unduly burdensome.” Additionally, no public ordinances on
public smoking for marijuana could be more restrictive than what’s
currently in place for tobacco.
- Existing medical cannabis dispensaries, as well as any new retail
licensees, would be able to start selling to adult consumers starting 60
days after the measure’s enactment. After 180 days, they could start
delivering cannabis products to adults.
- The same state departments that oversee the current medical cannabis
program would be responsible for regulate the adult-use market.
- A 10 percent excise tax would be imposed on adult-use marijuana
products, and the initiative stipulates that the legislature would be
empowered to decrease that tax rate but not raise it.
- Revenue from those tax dollars would go toward the state general fund
(40 percent), as well as county governments (30 percent) and municipal
governments (30 percent) where retail sales occurred. For unincorporated
jurisdictions, revenue would be split evenly, with 5o percent for the
general fund and 50 percent for the counties.
- Sixty days after the measure’s enactment, the tax rate on marijuana
for registered cannabis patients would be eliminated.
- It also states that state-licensed marijuana businesses couldn’t be
prevented from engaging in interstate commerce if there’s a change in
federal law, or a court action, permitting such activity. If that happens,
the legislature would be authorized to place up to a 3 percent wholesale
tax on cannabis exported beyond state lines.

As Oklahoma activists work to collect signatures, meanwhile, law
enforcement leaders with the Oklahoma Association of Chiefs and Oklahoma
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs have been raising concerns about
cannabis.


*— 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. —*

Meanwhile in Oklahoma, lawmakers in March advanced a bill aimed at protecting
gun rights of state-registered medical marijuana patients, although federal
law still bars cannabis users from owning firearms regardless of their
patient status.

Another state bill filed in January by a GOP legislator would criminalize
the use of medical cannabis during pregnancy.

*Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.*

The post Oklahoma Marijuana Campaign In ‘Home Stretch’ For 2026
Legalization Initiative, With Under Three Weeks To Collect Signatures
appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

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