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Oklahoma House lawmakers defeated House Bill 3127, which would have allowed employers to classify more jobs as "safety-sensitive" and fire medical marijuana users. Proponents argued it gave businesses more discretion, while critics raised concerns about legal protections for prescription users and potential overreach. The bill's author may bring the measure back for reconsideration in the future.

Win for Oklahoma Patients: Lawmakers Defeat Bill That Would’ve Let Bosses Fire More Medical Users

Mar 14, 2026

Source:

Marijuana Moment

Marijuana Moment

Oklahoma medical marijuana patients can breathe a sigh of relief after state lawmakers shot down a bill that could have put their jobs at risk. House Bill 3127 aimed to give employers much more power to label almost any role as "safety-sensitive," which would allow them to fire workers who test positive for THC—even if they have a legal prescription. Fortunately, critics of the bill pointed out that current laws already cover high-risk jobs, like operating heavy machinery or carrying firearms, and that expanding this definition was an unnecessary overreach.

While the bill's author hasn't given up and might try to bring it back later, this win is a major deal for the 315,000+ licensed Oklahomans who rely on their medicine. For everyday tokers, this victory protects the right to use cannabis without the constant fear of losing a livelihood for something done legally at home. It’s a huge win for the community because it reinforces that having a medical card shouldn't make you a second-class citizen in the workforce.

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