Utah Senate Committee Advances House-Approved Medical Cannabis Expansions

A House-approved bill containing minor expansions to the Utah medical cannabis program advanced last week from a key Senate committee, The Salt Lake Tribune reports.

As originally written, HB203 would have added 25 licenses to the state medical cannabis program and established a cannabis ombudsman position to help oversee the industry. The proposal that advanced from the Senate Health and Human Services Committee, however, looks quite different from the House-approved version — the bill now only expands the number of medical cannabis licensees by two, and the Senate committee also removed the ombudsman role from the proposal.

The bill was already approved last month by the House in a bipartisan 57-15 vote but then stagnated in the Senate committee, where pressure from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) and other conservative groups worked against the reforms. But the committee eventually voted 6-0 to advance the proposal to the full Senate. If approved, the House will need to reconsider the proposal given the changes made in the Senate.

HB203’s sponsor Rep. Jennifer Dailey-Provost (D) described in the report a sense of “betrayal and frustration” at seeing the proposal languish in committee for so long after making “literally every concession

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