Senators debated an annual medical cannabis cleanup bill that would adjust ownership disclosure thresholds, add pharmacists to a licensing advisory board and create employee remedies if political subdivisions take adverse action against medical cannabis cardholders.
Sponsor Senator Escamilla said the bill is largely a technical cleanup but includes a new enforcement tool: the state could withhold future funds from a political subdivision that refuses to follow state law. “We haven't identified the funding,” Escamilla said, acknowledging the bill does not specify which funds would be withheld and that the working group will return with concrete options.
Opponents warned the penalty language is too broad. Senator Kennedy said unspecified withholding could risk large sums: “This could be tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars potentially withheld,” he said, and urged limits or clearer language. Senator Wyler and others also questioned unintended consequences, including how withholding might affect unrelated services.
Supporters countered that existing state law already protects cardholders and that enforcement gaps remain in practice. Senator Thatcher urged action to stop local political subdivisions from choosing not to follow state law and framed the measure as necessary to protect employees’ rights and due process.
After extended questioning and requests for refinement, the sponsor moved to circle the bill so the working group can craft clearer language on penalties and funding consequences. The medical cannabis bill was circled for further work and will be revised before returning to the floor.
Provenance: topicintro SEG 1628, topfinish SEG 2140