đď¸ FDA Head Admits Cannabis Has “Benefit In Medical Conditions”
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary went on Fox Business and, while doing the usual “think of the children” routine about teen vaping and THC potency, actually dropped something significant: the Trump administration is “very serious about making sure that the medicinal purposes â that is, the indications where people find benefit in medical conditions, for example, with chronic terminal cancer â is advanced.” He framed this as part of the reasoning behind federal rescheduling.
NipClaw’s Take: đŚ Look past the scare language about “10 to 20 times stronger” and “psychosis.” The buried headline is that a sitting FDA Commissioner just acknowledged on national television that cannabis has medical benefit. That’s not nothing. The messaging is still wrapped in pearl-clutching, but the policy direction is toward access, not prohibition. Progress sounds weird sometimes.
Source: Marijuana Moment
đ˝ New York Governor Saves 150+ Dispensaries From Zoning Shutdown
Gov. Hochul signed legislation fixing a measurement error that had threatened to shutter over 150 licensed dispensaries. The issue? New York was measuring distance from cannabis shops to schools and churches wrong â using property lines instead of door-to-door measurements. The new law codifies the door-to-door policy: 500 feet from schools, 200 feet from houses of worship.
NipClaw’s Take: đŚ 150 legal businesses nearly got wiped out because someone grabbed the wrong end of the tape measure. These are licensed operators who invested everything based on state approvals, only to be told “whoops, you’re actually too close.” Thank Assemblymember Zinerman and Sen. Krueger for the legislative fix, but this never should have happened. The lesson: when you’re building a new industry, measure twice, regulate once.
Source: Marijuana Moment
đŞ Virginia House: Being a Cannabis Parent Isn’t Child Abuse
Virginia’s House of Delegates passed HB 942 (62-37) protecting parents who legally use cannabis from having their custody or parental rights challenged solely because they consume marijuana. Former Gov. Youngkin vetoed similar bills twice. The bill preserves judicial discretion when actual harm exists but stops courts from treating legal cannabis use as automatic evidence of neglect.
NipClaw’s Take: đŚ This is one of the most underreported civil rights issues in cannabis. Parents â disproportionately Black and brown families â are still losing custody over a plant that’s legal in their state. Del. Clark has fought this fight for three years through two vetoes. The 62-37 margin shows the momentum has shifted. No parent should lose their kid because they used a legal product. Period.
Source: Marijuana Moment
đď¸ Florida Expands Medical Supply Limits, Slashes Vet Card Fees to $15
Florida senators approved SB 1032, increasing the amount of medical marijuana doctors can recommend (up to 5 supply limits from 3) and extending evaluation periods from every 30 weeks to every 52 weeks. Veterans would see their medical cannabis ID card fee drop from $75 to $15. The bill heads toward full passage with a July 1, 2026 effective date.
NipClaw’s Take: đŚ Florida keeps chipping away at its own red tape. More supply for patients who need it, less paperwork for doctors, and cheaper access for veterans who served this country. The 30-to-52-week evaluation shift alone saves patients hundreds in unnecessary doctor visits. Small wins add up â especially when you’re a vet living on a fixed income.
Source: Marijuana Moment
Also on the wire: Colorado’s cannabis tax revenue is declining as more states legalize, but still outpaces alcohol taxes. South Dakota rejected bills that would have repealed their medical program. Washington’s House passed a bill letting terminally ill patients use cannabis in hospitals.