Legislative news
Gov. Greg Abbott issues last-minute veto of THC ban in Texas

Texas' THC industry is safe for now.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed a bill Sunday, June 22 to ban all THC consumables, allowing the booming market flush with THC-infused vapes, gummies, and other products to continue to be sold across San Antonio and the rest of the state.
Abbott, a Republican, waited until the final moment to veto the bill in what would have been one of the most restrictive THC bans in the country and a significant blow to the state’s billion-dollar industry.
Had the bill been signed into law, it would have also had significant repercussions in San Antonio. Several businesses have sprung up in recent years to take advantage of loopholes in existing law that have allowed many THC-infused goods to enter the market. In addition to dispensaries and smoke shops, THC products can be found at more mainstream businesses.
Along them is Lazydaze, an Amsterdam-style coffee shop on the St. Mary's Strip that serves a variety of cannabis-laced coffees and teas. The founder of local apparel brand Grunt Style launched Forged in Freedom, a new THC seltzer brand, a few days after the Texas Senate passed the bill.

The law would have made it a misdemeanor to own, manufacture, or sell consumable THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, products and was the latest push by states to regulate THC after a 2018 federal law allowed states to regulate hemp, a similar plant to marijuana that can be synthetically processed to produce THC, the compound giving marijuana its psychoactive properties.
Texas has some of the strictest marijuana laws in the country, prohibiting all recreational use and providing a limited medical marijuana program. The consumables market has allowed residents to legally access goods giving a similar high to marijuana.
Republican lawmakers have criticized the products as dangerous due to a lack of federal oversight in how the goods are manufactured. Texas’ ban is one of the more far-reaching among states that have taken similar steps. Several states, including California, have imposed age limits and restrictions on the potency of THC products.
Critics of the Texas bill say it allows people who cannot access marijuana through the state’s medical marijuana program to acquire goods that can provide a similar relief. Many retailers across the state also pointed to the thousands of jobs and millions in revenue the industry brings each year.
Last year, Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed a bill that would have put age restrictions on THC consumables, claiming it would hurt small businesses.
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CultureMap San Antonio editor Brandon Watson contributed to this report.
