Green Light Law Group: Top 5 Oregon Cannabis Stories of 2022
Oregon’s cannabis market experienced extreme difficulties and regulatory upheaval in 2022. Many of the highlights below arise from the aftermath of HB 3000 (2021), the reverberations of which will likely continue as the legislature prepares for a long session in 2023:
To combat overproduction and market saturation the Oregon marijuana industry lobbied and successfully passed a moratorium on the issuance of new production, processing, wholesale, and retail licenses. As a result, the only way to acquire one of the listed license types is through purchase of an existing license. The OLCC will create a license reassignment program to reissue forfeited and expired licenses, and there is some hope the agency will use this as an opportunity to create an equity licensing program. In the hemp industry, law enforcement successfully pushed legislation that allows local governments to stop ODA from awarding new hemp licenses in their jurisdiction. Jackson and Josephine Counties, the two largest hemp producing counties in the state, passed such moratoriums. Both the marijuana and hemp moratorium legislation included sunset provisions, so keep an eye out for potential legislation going forward.
Oregon’s Legislative 2022 Session Will Only Increase Illegal Cannabis Activity and Organized CrimeJackson and Josephine County, Oregon, Impose Hemp Moratoriums
5) Governor Brown pardons marijuana offenses.
Ending on a high note, outgoing Oregon Governor Kate Brown pardoned an estimated 45,000 convictions for simple possession of marijuana and by doing so absolved approximately $14 million in unpaid fines and fees stemming from those convictions. Governor Brown’s pardons came in the wake of President Joe Biden taking similar action at the federal level. Much work is still needed for Oregon to right to wrongs of prohibition, but nevertheless Governor Brown’s pardons are certainly a positive development.