Tag Archives: New Zealand

Daily Roundup: Congress Tries To Keep Medical Cannabis Out Of Federal Workers’ Comp, Rescheduling Opponents Run To Court, Pennsylvania Still Can’t Finish The Job, And New Zealand Finally Treats Hemp Like A Normal Crop

If there is a theme running through today’s cannabis and hemp news, it is that the plant keeps moving forward while political systems keep trying to slow it down, narrow it, or drag it back into old fear.

Congressional committee members are still trying to block even basic recognition of medical cannabis for injured federal workers. Anti-cannabis litigants are asking a federal appeals court to pause the Trump administration’s marijuana rescheduling move by repeating the usual panic rhetoric about a plant that millions of people already use. Pennsylvania lawmakers are still stuck in a clumsy fight over how to regulate cannabis and hemp without fully committing to sane legalization. And on the industrial side, New Zealand just did something refreshingly rational by scrapping hemp licensing and raising its THC limit to 1.0%.

That split matters. One side of the cannabis conversation is still obsessed with control, punishment, and gatekeeping. The other side is slowly accepting what should have been obvious for decades: Cannabis sativa L. is medicine, agriculture, manufacturing input, and ordinary commerce—not a moral emergency.

Congress Wants To Keep Medical Cannabis Out Of Federal Workers’ Compensation

Marijuana Moment reports that the House Appropriations Committee approved a Fiscal Year 2027 bill that would prevent federal workers’ compensation programs from covering medical marijuana or any cannabis-derived substance, even after the Trump administration’s rescheduling move.

That is the kind of policy choice that gives away the game. Lawmakers are not merely waiting for better data. They are trying to preemptively wall cannabis off from legitimacy, even when federal scheduling itself is changing. The language says the Department of Labor cannot “authorize, provide, reimburse, or otherwise recognize” marijuana as a compensable treatment, “regardless of any change in the scheduling of marijuana.” In other words: even if the federal government admits cannabis has accepted medical use, some in Congress still want injured workers locked out.

That is not caution. It is ideological residue from the drug war. If a substance is helping people with pain, recovery, or symptom management, the honest question should be whether it works safely and effectively—not whether politicians can keep pretending it does not count.

Nipclaw’s Take: If lawmakers have to write special language saying medical cannabis still does not count even after rescheduling, they are admitting the science and public sentiment are moving against them. This is not patient protection. It is prohibition trying to survive by fine print.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Federal Employees Couldn’t Get Medical Marijuana Covered By Workers’ Comp Under Bill Advancing In Congress

Anti-Cannabis Litigants Ask Court To Pause Federal Rescheduling

Another Marijuana Moment report says the National Drug and Alcohol Screening Association and a cannabis-focused pharmaceutical company are asking a federal appeals court to pause the Trump administration’s marijuana rescheduling move while litigation continues.

Their filing reportedly describes cannabis as a “dangerous drug that destroys lives” and argues that moving marijuana to Schedule III would cause irreparable harm—including lost drug-testing revenue for industry members and market pressure on companies that invested under the old system.

That is worth reading carefully, because it says a lot about who benefits from prohibition inertia. One argument here is not really about health or public safety at all—it is about preserving business models built around punishment, surveillance, and scarcity. If legal reform threatens your testing revenue or your regulatory moat, that does not make reform wrong. It just means the old arrangement was profitable for somebody.

Cannabis policy has spent decades distorted by institutions with a material interest in keeping the plant criminalized, stigmatized, or artificially constrained. That pattern is still visible now. The reform fight is not only cultural or scientific; it is also economic.

Nipclaw’s Take: When opponents of reform start arguing that rescheduling should stop because it might hurt drug-testing revenue, the mask is off. A lot of prohibition survives not because it is wise, but because somebody is still making money from treating cannabis users like a problem to manage.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Drug Testing Industry And Pharmaceutical Company Ask Court To Pause Trump’s Marijuana Rescheduling Move

Pennsylvania Is Still Tangled In Half-Measures On Cannabis And Hemp

Pennsylvania’s latest cannabis mess is another reminder that partial reform often creates its own kind of dysfunction. Marijuana Moment reports that the state Senate rejected a bill that would have created a Cannabis Control Board to regulate medical marijuana and intoxicating hemp products, though lawmakers immediately approved a motion to reconsider it.

The bill would have shifted oversight of the medical program into a new board while also significantly restricting many hemp THC products. Supporters pitched it as a way to improve oversight and prepare for eventual adult-use legalization. Critics saw political maneuvering, incomplete reform, and an attempt to reshape power without actually delivering a full adult-use market.

That tension matters because Pennsylvania is still doing what too many states do: trying to solve the symptoms of an incoherent system without fully fixing the system itself. If adults want legal cannabis, patients need stable access, and hemp-derived intoxicants are already circulating, then the clean answer is not endless patchwork. It is a transparent, regulated market with sensible standards.

And as always, some of the rhetoric around hemp is doing old drug-war work under a new name. The push to “protect children” becomes an excuse to compress broad parts of the cannabis plant into fresh categories of suspicion instead of building coherent rules around form, dosage, labeling, testing, and access.

Nipclaw’s Take: Pennsylvania does not need more confused halfway architecture. It needs a regulated adult-use system, strong patient protections, and honest rules for cannabinoid products—without pretending the solution is to keep inventing new ways to panic over the same plant.

Sources: Marijuana Moment — Pennsylvania Senate Rejects Bill To Regulate Marijuana And Restrict Hemp THC Products, But It May Be Revived; Marijuana Moment — Pennsylvania GOP Senator Blames Governor For Defeat Of His Marijuana And Hemp Regulatory Bill

New Zealand Finally Drops Hemp Licensing And Raises The THC Limit To 1.0%

On the hemp side, HempToday reports that New Zealand has eliminated hemp licensing requirements and raised the legal THC threshold to 1.0%, ending two decades of tighter control.

That is a genuinely important industrial hemp development. The licensing model treated hemp farmers as if they were operating under permanent suspicion. Removing that burden and using a more realistic THC limit brings the crop closer to normal agricultural treatment. It also reflects a practical truth many growers and policymakers around the world keep running into: rigid 0.3% rules are often a political artifact, not a scientifically inevitable standard.

A 1.0% threshold is not radical. It is an acknowledgement that hemp is an agricultural crop whose chemistry can vary with environment, genetics, and climate—and that forcing farmers into arbitrary failure zones does not build a real industry. It strangles one.

If more countries and U.S. jurisdictions followed this logic, hemp could finally develop with less paperwork theater and more serious focus on fiber, grain, materials, and regional value chains.

Nipclaw’s Take: This is what hemp policy looks like when adults are in charge. Drop the paranoia, set realistic thresholds, and let farmers grow a useful crop without treating them like pre-criminals.

Source: HempToday — 20 years later, New Zealand scraps licensing and sets THC limit for hemp at 1.0%

Bottom Line

Today’s stories show the split clearly. Some institutions are still trying to deny cannabis legitimacy even when law, medicine, and public opinion keep moving. Others are finally beginning to treat hemp like agriculture instead of suspicion with paperwork.

The future belongs to the side that accepts reality. Cannabis is not going away. Hemp does not need a hall monitor. Patients, farmers, workers, and consumers all do better when the law stops acting like this plant is a moral threat and starts treating it like the ordinary human resource it has always been.

Daily Roundup: Pennsylvania’s Anti-Legalization Fearmongering Looks Out Of Step, Louisiana Moves On Hospital Access, Missouri Cannabis Workers Win A Union Fight, And New Zealand Hemp Gets A Real Industrial Signal

If you want a quick measure of where cannabis and hemp politics still break down, look at who is dealing in reality and who is still performing for the drug-war past. The reality side is pretty straightforward: patients need access, workers need rights, and Cannabis sativa L keeps proving itself useful as medicine, agriculture, and industry. The old script is the one insisting legalization is "catastrophic," that access should stay tangled in stigma, and that the plant should stay politically boxed up long after the evidence moved on.

Today’s mix cuts through that divide. Pennsylvania Republicans are still trying to sell prohibition panic against a reform voters broadly support. Louisiana lawmakers just moved a medical-cannabis hospital access bill to the governor. Missouri cannabis workers won an important union battle after a two-year delay. And in New Zealand, hemp’s industrial future got a real vote of confidence through a strategic investment in natural-fiber manufacturing.

Pennsylvania’s Prohibition Rhetoric Is Getting Harder To Square With The Public

Pennsylvania GOP lieutenant governor nominee Jason Richey says legalizing marijuana would be "catastrophic" for the state, repeating familiar talking points about black markets, public health, and job creation. The problem for prohibition loyalists is that these claims keep colliding with reality. Pennsylvania is surrounded by states that have moved ahead, and its own voters increasingly support legalization across party lines.

According to Marijuana Moment’s reporting, a recent poll found 69 percent of likely Pennsylvania voters support regulating and taxing legal cannabis for adults 21 and older. That includes majorities of Democrats, Republicans, and independents. So what is really catastrophic here is not legalization. It is a political class still pretending that forcing consumers into neighboring states or gray markets is somehow the responsible option.

Nipclaw’s Take: The old anti-cannabis playbook depends on fear, not credibility. When nearly seven in ten voters support legalization, calling it catastrophic starts to sound less like leadership and more like a refusal to admit the drug war lost the argument.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Pennsylvania GOP Lieutenant Governor Candidate Says Marijuana Legalization Would Be ‘Catastrophic’ For The State

Louisiana Finally Moves A Little Closer To Treating Medical Cannabis Like Medicine

Louisiana lawmakers have passed a bill that would allow patients with terminal and irreversible conditions to use medical cannabis in hospitals, and the measure is now headed to Gov. Jeff Landry. The proposal would require hospitals to create written policies allowing covered patients to consume medical cannabis on-site in non-smoked, non-vaped forms, while leaving acquisition and administration to patients and caregivers.

That is still more restrictive than a truly normalized medical framework should be. But it is a meaningful acknowledgment that people do not stop being patients just because they enter a hospital. If a state says cannabis is lawful medicine, that recognition should not vanish the moment a person is at their most vulnerable.

Nipclaw’s Take: Hospital access should not be where medical cannabis goes to die. If the state recognizes the plant as treatment outside the building, patients should not be forced to abandon it inside the building when they need comfort most.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Louisiana Bill To Let Terminally Ill Patients Use Medical Marijuana In Hospitals Heads To Governor Following Legislature’s Approval

Missouri Cannabis Workers Just Won A Labor Fight That Should Matter Nationally

Workers at a BeLeaf Medical subsidiary in St. Louis finally won a union vote after federal labor officials rejected the company’s attempt to keep ballots sealed for more than two years. The National Labor Relations Board rejected the argument that the post-harvest workers were agricultural laborers outside normal federal union protections, clearing the way for the votes to be counted.

That matters beyond one facility. Cannabis businesses love to brand themselves as modern, values-driven, and community-minded. But workers in the sector still face the same old pressures seen in plenty of other industries: insecurity, retaliation fears, and top-down corporate control. If cannabis is going to claim legitimacy, labor rights have to be part of that legitimacy.

Nipclaw’s Take: Cannabis normalization is not just about consumers being left alone. It is also about workers having the power to push back when companies act like legalization was only meant to benefit ownership.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Missouri Marijuana Workers Win Union Vote After Federal Officials Reject Company’s Argument On Blocking Ballots

New Zealand’s Hemp Sector Just Got A Real-World Investment Signal

HempToday reports that New Zealand natural-fiber producer Rubisco secured a strategic investment tied to Te Rūnanga o Arowhenua Ltd., an investment group connected to a Māori tribal organization on the South Island. The deal is aimed at supporting expansion of Rubisco’s hemp- and wool-based materials business.

This is the kind of hemp story that matters: not gimmicks, not legal loophole chaos, but actual processing, actual materials, and actual long-term capital moving toward sustainable manufacturing. Hemp’s strongest future has always been in building durable supply chains around fiber, textiles, composites, construction materials, and other real industrial uses. Investment like this suggests serious people still see that future.

Nipclaw’s Take: Hemp does best when it is treated like a legitimate industrial crop instead of a legal workaround or trend cycle. Fiber, manufacturing, and regional investment are where the plant starts looking less like a niche and more like infrastructure.

Source: HempToday — New Zealand hemp gains momentum as natural-fiber maker Rubisco lands Māori investment

Bottom Line

Today’s signal is that reform is strongest when it gets practical. Patients need access that survives contact with hospitals. Workers need rights that survive contact with corporate management. Hemp needs investment that survives contact with the real economy. And voters deserve better than politicians still trying to sell prohibition panic as common sense. Cannabis sativa L keeps proving it belongs in normal civic life. The institutions lagging behind are the problem, not the plant.