The Michigan Cannabis Regulatory Agency is asking the state Legislature for help addressing black-market growing and selling of marijuana. At the agency's most recent public meeting, regulators said they need more authority to address illicit activity in the cannabis market, unreliable and fraudulent testing results that companies have submitted to the agency, and an increase of intoxicating — but unregulated — hemp-derived products.
During the September 4 meeting in Lansing, the regulatory agency's executive director, Brian Hanna, showed a product he said was sold at a Michigan liquor store but had three times as much THC as a regulated marijuana product could have. Hanna said it's legal though, through a loophole in the 2018 Farm Bill, which legalized hemp production for commercial and industrial use. That exemption allows for unregulated hemp products to be sold without age or labeling restrictions, said Hanna.
The market has changed dramatically since that farm bill took effect, Cannabis Regulatory Agency spokesperson David Harns told Michigan Public in an interview. He highlighted the urgency of state action.
"It's been turned into a market where they can convert non-intoxicating cannabinoids into intoxicating ones and sell them under the guise of hemp," Harns said. "And so the fact that you can get those at the gas station or you can get them in unregulated spaces is concerning."
Read more at Michigan Public