SB 22-205
signedIntoxicating Hemp And Tetrahydrocannabinol Products
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedSenate Bill 22-205 in Colorado deals with products made from industrial hemp that can cause intoxication. It allows the state health department to ban certain chemical processes used to make these products and sets up a task force to study them further. The task force will include experts, government officials, and industry representatives who will report their findings by January 1, 2023. This bill has been signed into law, meaning its provisions are now in effect.
Official Summary
The act authorizes the department of public health and environment to prohibit the chemical modification, conversion, or synthetic derivation of intoxicating tetrahydrocannabinol isomers that originate from industrial hemp or may be synthetically derived. The act also creates a task force to study intoxicating hemp products and make legislative and rule recommendations. The task force will submit a report to the general assembly by January 1, 2023. The task force consists of 20 members including representatives of state government, experts in marijuana and industrial hemp regulation, persons licensed in the marijuana and medical marijuana fields, persons working with industrial hemp, testing laboratories, and a representative of a county or district public health agency. For the 2022-23 state fiscal year, the act appropriates $587,347 from the marijuana tax cash fund to the department of law, $4,630 of which is reappropriated to the department of personnel. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- Senate
- First action
- 2022-05-31
- Latest action
- 2022-04-13
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Business, Labor, & Technology
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Alex Valdez (primary) · Democratic