| Washington, D.C. — Americans for Safe Access (ASA), the nation’s largest patient-focused medical cannabis organization, will host a briefing on November 14 in response to Congress clarifying hemp definitions in the recent “minibus” spending bill. |
| The new language closes a loophole in the 2018 Hemp Bill that allowed an unregulated market of intoxicating hemp products to proliferate — a problem states have struggled to control for years. While much of the media has inaccurately framed the change as a “ban on hemp,” the provisions instead incorporate the “Miller Amendment” language first seen in last year’s Farm Bill draft that was passed in the House version of the Agriculture Appropriations Bill, adding new definitions for “industrial hemp” and “hemp-derived products.” These provisions will take effect 365 days after passage.
For many patients, however, this will come as a shock. Hemp-derived “full-spectrum” products — often purchased online — have become their primary source of cannabinoid therapy, especially in states without functioning medical cannabis programs or in markets where patients must compete with adult-use consumers. Although manufacturers have long assured patients that these products were legal, the DEA has maintained its position on their illegality since their arrival on the market, creating 7 years of confusion, mixed messaging, and inconsistent enforcement. |
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| Leading up to the government shutdown, the fate of hemp-derived products seemed uncertain. Although the House Agriculture Committee voted to close the hemp loophole, the Senate version removed the language at the last minute through an amendment by Senator Rand Paul. However, a letter signed by a bipartisan group of 39 Attorneys General on October 24th, urging congressional action, all but sealed the inclusion of clarifying definitions in the final minibus language. |
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| Experts at ASA’s briefing will clarify what these policies actually mean for patients today, tomorrow, and a year from now — and outline urgent policy solutions to protect medical cannabis access at both the state and federal levels. |
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| In addition to patient implications, experts will examine how the hemp and cannabis markets arrived at this point and why it is time for federal policymakers to address medical cannabis access directly. |
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Attendees will learn:What happened on Capitol Hill — from appropriations debates to the final “minibus” version — and how the hemp lobby prioritized intoxicating hemp over patient access. The legislative history from the 2018 Farm Bill to the 2025 minibus and implications for state and federal reform. The pharmacology of hemp-derived products used by patients, the limits of the “perceived” legal hemp market, and gaps in existing medical programs. The dangers of unregulated markets and steps states can take now to ensure patient access within regulated systems.
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| When: Friday, November 14, 1:00 p.m. ET
Where: Virtual briefing —ZOOM |













