Bill Tracker
based on: Profile: Marijuana Industry Group
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Bill:
HB22-1037
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Title: |
Retail And Medical Marijuana Same Location |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 01/12/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (01/20/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (04/07/2022) | Senate Committee | Local Government | House Committee | Transportation and Local Government | Senate Sponsors | S. Jaquez Lewis (D) | House Sponsors | | Summary | The bill allows a person to operate a licensed medical marijuana
business and a licensed retail marijuana business at the same location if permitted by the local licensing authority and the local jurisdiction where the businesses are located and subject to requirements regarding separation of operations.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning the ability of a person to operate a dual marijuana business at the same location. |
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Bill:
HB22-1116
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Title: |
Plant-based Medicines |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 01/21/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (04/05/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | House Committee on Public & Behavioral Health & Human Services Postpone Indefinitely (04/05/2022) | Senate Committee | | House Committee | Public and Behavioral Health & Human Services | Senate Sponsors | J. Ginal (D) | House Sponsors | A. Valdez (D) | Summary | The bill creates the plant-based medicine policy review panel
(policy review panel). The purpose of the policy review panel is to study the use of plant-based medicines to support mental health. The policy review panel operates for one year. The policy review panel shall submit a report on its findings and policy recommendations to the house of representatives public and behavioral health and human services
committee and the senate health and human services committee, or any successor committees; the governor; and the department of human services.
The bill defines plant-based medicine as a naturally occurring
hallucinogenic plant-based compound. Forms of plant-based medicine only include psilocybin, psilocyn, dimethyltryptamine, and ibogaine.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning establishing a policy review panel to study plant-based medicines to support mental health. |
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Bill:
HB22-1135
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Title: |
Marijuana Transporter License Transfers |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 01/31/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (06/01/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (03/24/2022) | Senate Committee | Business, Labor and Technology | House Committee | Business Affairs and Labor | Senate Sponsors | R. Rodriguez (D) | House Sponsors | M. Snyder (D) | Summary | Under current law, a marijuana transporter license cannot be
transferred with a change of ownership. The bill removes this prohibition.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning permitting the transfer of a marijuana transporter license with a change of ownership. |
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Bill:
HB22-1152
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Title: |
Prohibit Employer Adverse Action Marijuana Use |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 02/04/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (06/02/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | House Committee on Business Affairs & Labor Postpone Indefinitely (03/24/2022) | Senate Committee | | House Committee | Business Affairs and Labor | Senate Sponsors | | House Sponsors | B. Titone (D) | Summary | The bill prohibits an employer from taking adverse action against
an employee, including an applicant for employment, who engages in the use of:
Medical marijuana on the premises of the employer during working hours; or
Retail or medical marijuana off the premises of the employer during nonworking hours.
An employer is permitted to impose restrictions on employee use
of medical or retail marijuana under specified circumstances.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning limitations on the ability of an employer to take an adverse action against an employee based on the employee's use of marijuana. |
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Bill:
HB22-1222
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Title: |
Marijuana Responsible Vendor Designations |
Position | Amend | Intro Date | 02/10/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (02/23/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (04/21/2022) | Senate Committee | Business, Labor and Technology | House Committee | Business Affairs and Labor | Senate Sponsors | R. Rodriguez (D) | House Sponsors | | Summary | Under current law, a licensed medical or retail marijuana business
may receive a responsible vendor designation (designation) if all of its employees successfully complete an approved course. If the business is subject to a licensing action, the designation can be considered a mitigating factor in the licensing action. The bill allows an individual to receive a designation and provides the same licensing mitigation protection to that individual in a licensing action. The bill clarifies how a business receives and maintains a designation and allows a person with
a designation to take that designation with them to a new employer.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning marijuana responsible vendor training. |
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Bill:
HB22-1278
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Title: |
Behavioral Health Administration |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 03/02/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/04/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (05/25/2022) | Senate Committee | Health and Human Services | House Committee | Public and Behavioral Health & Human Services | Senate Sponsors | C. Simpson (R) | House Sponsors | M. Young (D) | Summary |
The bill creates the behavioral health administration (BHA) in the department of human services (department) to create a coordinated, cohesive, and effective behavioral health system in the state. The BHA will handle most of the behavioral health programs that were previously handled by the office of behavioral health in the department. The bill establishes a commissioner as the head of the BHA and authorizes the
commissioner and state board of human services to adopt and amend rules that previously were promulgated by the executive director of the department. By July 1, 2024, the bill requires the BHA to establish: • A statewide behavioral health grievance system; • A behavioral health performance monitoring system; • A comprehensive behavioral health safety net system; • Regionally-based behavioral health administrative service organizations; • The BHA as the licensing authority for all behavioral health entities; and • The BHA advisory council to provide feedback to the BHA on the behavioral health system in the state. The bill transfers to the department of public health and environment responsibility for community prevention and early intervention programs previously administered by the department. The bill makes extensive conforming amendments.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description |
Concerning the creation of the behavioral health administration, and, in connection therewith, making and reducing an appropriation.
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Bill:
HB22-1321
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Title: |
Study Of Devices Assessing Motorist Impairment |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 03/24/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/03/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (06/08/2022) | Senate Committee | Appropriations | House Committee | Judiciary | Senate Sponsors | | House Sponsors | H. McKean (R) | Summary |
The bill establishes a study to investigate FDA-cleared devices that are capable of assessing cognitive and physical impairment of motorists
to detect the presence of drugs other than alcohol during roadside sobriety investigations. The bill requires the Colorado department of transportation (department) to issue a request for proposal for a study and report to be conducted and completed not later than June 1, 2023. The department shall submit and present a final report with the findings of the study at the joint transportation committee's State Measurement for Accountable, Responsive, and Transparent (SMART) Government Act hearing and to the Colorado task force on drunk and impaired driving. The bill sets requirements and standards for the study. The study repeals July 1, 2024.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description |
Concerning a study of devices that are based on FDA-cleared technology capable of self-assessing impairment of motorists to detect the presence of drugs other than alcohol during roadside sobriety investigations, and, in connection therewith, making an appropriation.
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Bill:
HB22-1329
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Title: |
2022-23 Long Bill |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 03/28/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (04/25/2022) | Senate Committee | Appropriations | House Committee | Appropriations | Senate Sponsors | C. Hansen (D) | House Sponsors | J. McCluskie (D) | Summary |
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description |
Concerning the provision for payment of the expenses of the executive, legislative, and judicial departments of the state of Colorado, and of its agencies and institutions, for and during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2022, except as otherwise noted.
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Bill:
HB22-1341
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Title: |
Marijuana Tax Cash Fund |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 03/28/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (03/28/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (04/25/2022) | Senate Committee | Appropriations | House Committee | Appropriations | Senate Sponsors | R. Zenzinger (D) | House Sponsors | L. Herod (D) J. McCluskie (D) | Summary | Joint Budget Committee. When the marijuana tax cash fund
(fund) was initially created, money in the fund was only available to be appropriated for fiscal years following the fiscal year in which it was received by the state. In 2020, the general assembly repealed this restriction, but in 2021, this language was inadvertently added back in by legislation that made an unrelated conforming amendment. The bill
restores the correct language, which permits the general assembly to appropriate money from the fund for the same fiscal year in which it is received.
The bill delays transfers from the fund to the public school capital
construction assistance fund (BEST fund). Instead of transferring $100 million on June 1, 2022, the bill requires the state treasurer to transfer the following amounts from the fund to the BEST fund:
$50 million on June 1, 2022;
$30 million on June 1, 2023; and
$20 million on June 1, 2024.
The bill also modifies the reserve requirement within the fund.
Instead of limiting appropriations to 93% of the beginning balance in the fund, it requires the reserve to be 15% of the amount appropriated for the fiscal year. The bill also specifies that this reserve excludes any money from the fund that is designated to constitute part of the state emergency reserve and clarifies how the reserve works.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning measures to ensure that the marijuana tax cash fund is in balance. |
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Bill:
SB22-099
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Title: |
Sealing Criminal Records |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 02/01/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (04/25/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (05/31/2022) | Senate Committee | Judiciary | House Committee | Judiciary | Senate Sponsors | R. Rodriguez (D) | House Sponsors | | Summary | The bill requires a consumer reporting agency, upon written
request from a consumer, to disclose to each consumer whose report contains information from criminal justice records:
Each source from which the agency compiled the information; and
The date on which the information was requested.
Currently, there is a process that allows for automatic sealing of
criminal justice records for certain drug offenses. The bill extends that automatic sealing to all of the offenses, including civil infractions, that allow the defendant to petition the court for sealing criminal justice records that are not subject to the victims rights act. The bill streamlines the automatic record sealing process. The bill requires the state court administrator to produce an annual report regarding automatic record sealing.
The bill makes it an unfair employment practice to discharge or
refuse to promote a person based solely on the contents of a sealed criminal record and makes it an unfair housing practice to refuse to show, sell, transfer, rent, or lease housing based on the contents of a sealed criminal record.
The bill requires the Colorado bureau of investigation to produce
an annual report regarding record sealing.
The bill makes clarifying and organizational changes to the record
sealing statutes.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning the procedure for sealing of criminal records for nonviolent offenses, and, in connection therewith, addressing workforce shortages, minimizing barriers to employment for job seekers, and making an appropriation. |
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Bill:
SB22-120
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Title: |
Regulation Of Kratom Processors |
Position | Monitor | Intro Date | 02/03/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/03/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (05/26/2022) | Senate Committee | Finance | House Committee | Health and Insurance | Senate Sponsors | J. Ginal (D) | House Sponsors | | Summary | Effective January 1, 2023, the bill requires that, prior to selling or
offering for sale any kratom product, each kratom processor must register with the department of revenue (department) and disclose certain information regarding each of the kratom processor's kratom products.
The bill also:
Establishes the minimum requirements for kratom products;
Prohibits the sale of kratom products to individuals under
18 years of age;
Requires a kratom processor to notify the department within 7 days after being notified that an adverse effect report was made with the federal food and drug administration regarding any of the kratom processor's kratom products; and
Authorizes the department to investigate adverse effect reports to determine whether a kratom processor has violated any of the standards specified in the bill.
The executive director of the department is required to adopt rules
to administer and enforce the bill.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning the regulation of kratom processors. |
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Bill:
SB22-149
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Title: |
Improve Marijuana Industry Regulation |
Position | Oppose | Intro Date | 03/07/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/17/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Senate Committee on Health & Human Services Postpone Indefinitely (03/30/2022) | Senate Committee | Health and Human Services | House Committee | | Senate Sponsors | K. Priola (D) C. Hansen (D) | House Sponsors | J. Amabile (D) M. Lynch (R) | Summary | The bill requires future contracts for the seed-to-sale tracking
system to be awarded pursuant to a transparent, online, and dynamically competitive process. The bill requires the state licensing authority to produce an annual report regarding its enforcement activities. The report must include:
The number of underage compliance checks performed in
the previous calendar year;
The number of underage sale violations in the previous calendar year, including the name of the license violator, how many violations were the result of underage compliance checks or tips, and the sanction or sanctions imposed for each violation; and
A description of the black or gray market enforcement activities that the state licensing authority engaged in, including the dates of the activities, any violations found, and the result of those violations if known.
The bill requires the state licensing authority to produce an annual
report regarding licensing violations. The report must be organized by month, include the name of the violator and the violation location, and identify the violation and the sanction or sanctions imposed and if the sanction is a license revocation or voluntary surrender of a license and the reason for the revocation or voluntary surrender.
The state licensing authority shall maintain a free searchable
database on its website related to compliance check records and minor in possession of marijuana records and an online method for submitting an anonymous tip related to licensing violations.
The bill requires the state licensing authority to conduct at least 2
compliance checks a year at each medical and retail marijuana center.
The bill requires regulatory penalties related to underage sales to
be based on the number of violations and any injury or death that occurred as a result of the violation.
The bill requires the state licensing authority to promulgate rules
regarding:
Product recalls, including a requirement for the issuance of a health and safety advisory when a product is recalled that includes the name of the product, the timing of when the consumer would receive the advisory, the places where the product was sold, the time period when the product was for sale, the requested actions that the state licensing authority may direct to a seller, cultivator, or manufacturer, and any other additional information that would assist the public; and
Timelines and deadlines for notifying a licensee of an alleged violation; a licensee's response to an alleged violation; and a licensee's compliance with any sanction imposed, which must require, in the case of an uncontested violation, that the licensee has 90 days to comply with the sanction.
The bill directs that when the state licensing authority convenes a
work group, task force, or other group to assist in developing rules or policies that involve public health and consumer safety, the state licensing
authority shall make every reasonable attempt to have broad representation from non-marijuana industry parties on the work group, task force, or other group. The bill requires the state licensing authority to provide any written materials received from a member of the group or task force to all members of the group or task force within 7 days after receipt of the material; except that any proprietary information must be redacted from the material.
The bill requires that when the state licensing authority reports a
voluntary surrender of a license that is the result of a settlement or agreement with the licensing authority, the report shall designate the action as voluntary surrender - licensing violation settlement.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning measures to improve marijuana industry regulation. |
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Bill:
SB22-155
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Title: |
Expand Medical Marijuana Research Grant Programs |
Position | Amend | Intro Date | 03/14/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (04/23/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (06/09/2022) | Senate Committee | Health and Human Services | House Committee | Public and Behavioral Health & Human Services | Senate Sponsors | | House Sponsors | | Summary | The bill expands the medical marijuana research grant program by:
Providing grant funding for research intended to ascertain the safety of medical marijuana products; and
Encouraging the state board of health to prioritize grants to research the safety of medical marijuana products and the safety of administering medical marijuana for
posttraumatic stress disorder.
The bill requires the state treasurer to transfer $3 million from the
general fund to the health research subaccount in the medical marijuana cash fund for the purpose of providing research grants and administering the grant program.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning an expansion of medical marijuana research grant programs. |
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Bill:
SB22-178
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Title: |
Licensees Ability To Change Marijuana Designation |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 03/25/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (04/25/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (05/26/2022) | Senate Committee | Finance | House Committee | Finance | Senate Sponsors | J. Gonzales (D) | House Sponsors | A. Valdez (D) | Summary | The bill allows a medical marijuana cultivation facility licensee to
transfer medical marijuana to a retail marijuana cultivation facility licensee and the retail marijuana cultivation facility licensee to receive the marijuana and change the designation of the marijuana from medical to retail.
The bill clarifies that the retail marijuana cultivation facility
licensee is required to pay any retail marijuana excise tax.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning the ability for certain marijuana licensees to change the designation of marijuana from medical to retail, and, in connection therewith, making an appropriation. |
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Bill:
SB22-205
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Title: |
Intoxicating Hemp And Tetrahydrocannabinol Products |
Position | Support | Intro Date | 04/13/2022 | Hearing Room | | Hearing Time | | Hearing Date | | Fiscal Notes | Fiscal Notes (05/04/2022) | Full Text | Full Text of Bill | Lobbyists | Lobbyists | Status | Governor Signed (05/31/2022) | Senate Committee | Business, Labor and Technology | House Committee | Public and Behavioral Health & Human Services | Senate Sponsors | S. Fenberg (D) | House Sponsors | A. Valdez (D) | Summary | Section 2 of the bill prohibits:
The manufacture, sale, offering for sale, storage, or delivery of an adult use cannabis product that is not manufactured by a person licensed under the Colorado Marijuana Code (license holder);
The manufacture, sale, offering for sale, storage, or delivery of a product containing industrial hemp that is for human consumption and that is not food, a cosmetic, a dietary supplement, a food additive, an herb, or an over-the-counter drug that contains industrial hemp; and
The manufacture, sale, offering for sale, storage, or delivery of an industrial hemp product that was not manufactured by a registered wholesale food manufacturer.
Section 3 imposes a civil penalty of up to $10,000 for:
Manufacturing, selling, offering for sale, storing, or delivering an adult use cannabis product that is not manufactured by a license holder; and
Violating a permit requirement for industrial hemp products established by rule.
These penalties are credited to the the wholesale food manufacturing and storage protection cash fund.
Section 4 prohibits a political subdivision of Colorado from
promulgating or enforcing additional duties for or standards for food safety applicable to premises or places where industrial hemp products are held for distribution, produced, manufactured, packed, processed, prepared, treated, packaged, or transported.
Current law authorizes the department of public health and
environment (department) to require permits for manufacturing food that may be contaminated so that it is injurious to health. The department may establish standards for the permits and manufacturing. Section 5:
Adds dietary supplements, food additives, cosmetics, and industrial hemp products to this provision;
Adds that an ingredient that is injurious to health also authorizes the department to require a permit.
Section 6 requires a political subdivision of Colorado to get
department approval to perform food safety inspections at facilities used to store, manufacture, produce, pack, process, treat, package, or transport industrial hemp products.
Current law declares industrial hemp products not adulterated
unless the product violates certain provisions. Section 7 adds that an industrial hemp product is deemed adulterated if the product is an adult use cannabis product and is not manufactured by a license holder. Section 7 authorizes a wholesale food manufacturing facility to sell, produce, or possess products containing artificially derived cannabinoids only if:
The facility is registered;
The product is an industrial hemp product;
The product is not intoxicating; and
Prior to distribution and sale, the manufacturing facility has provided the marijuana enforcement division (division) samples and information concerning the product.
Section 9 authorizes the division to promulgate rules, with the
technical assistance of the department, to define the amount of one or more tetrahydrocannabinols that results in the designation of a product as an adult use cannabis product. Section 9 also requires the division to promulgate rules to regulate the manufacturing, distribution, and sale of adult use cannabis products as retail marijuana products.
Section 10 prohibits a retail marijuana store from offering for sale
or accepting an adult use cannabis product that was not properly designated as and transferred to it by a licensed retail marijuana products manufacturer or accelerator manufacturer.
Section 11 prohibits a retail marijuana manufacturer from
transferring an adult use cannabis product unless the person holds the appropriate license under the Colorado Marijuana Code.
Section 12 makes it a deceptive trade practice to violate the
provisions of the bill that apply to hemp, cannabis, or anything made from hemp or cannabis.
| Custom Summary | | Category | | Description | Concerning the regulation of cannabis-related products that may potentially cause a person to become intoxicated when used. |
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