Virginia cannabis veto delays market, strains businesses

a business signage on a green wall

Summary

Spanberger’s veto delayed Virginia’s retail cannabis market, extending uncertainty for hemp businesses, regulators, and consumers.

Why this matters

The veto leaves Virginia without a legal retail cannabis market for at least another year, affecting businesses that invested in preparation. It also delays final safety, testing, and enforcement rules for products consumers are already buying.

Gov. Abigail Spanberger’s May 19 veto of a bill to create a legal adult-use cannabis market in Virginia left hemp businesses facing more uncertainty and regulators without a final framework for oversight.

During her campaign, Spanberger said she would support a retail cannabis bill. In her veto statement, she said Virginia needed stronger enforcement and regulation.

“Virginians deserve a system that replaces the illicit cannabis market with one that prioritizes our children’s health and safety, public safety, product integrity, and accountability,” she wrote.

The bill passed by lawmakers would have allowed adults 21 and older to buy marijuana starting in January 2027. It proposed a few hundred licenses for retail stores and included testing and labeling rules, said Jason Blanchette, president of the Virginia Cannabis Association and a hemp grower in Hampton Roads.

Spanberger instead sent back changes that delayed sales until July 2027, capped stores at 200, reduced the personal possession limit to 2 ounces, and added criminal penalties, according to VPM.

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