Xenia proposes ban on adult-use cannabis operators

Adults over the age of 21 can buy cannabis for recreational use --- whether it be in the form of flower, gummies, chocolate bars, vapes or other products --- from dispensaries in the Dayton area. AYR Dispensary in east Dayton was among the first cannabis businesses to open their doors to recreational customers last month. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Adults over the age of 21 can buy cannabis for recreational use --- whether it be in the form of flower, gummies, chocolate bars, vapes or other products --- from dispensaries in the Dayton area. AYR Dispensary in east Dayton was among the first cannabis businesses to open their doors to recreational customers last month. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Xenia City Council has introduced legislation that would prohibit the establishment of recreational marijuana dispensaries and cultivators within the city.

Xenia joins a growing number of local jurisdictions, particularly in the Dayton area, that have enacted similar bans or moratoriums, citing ongoing rules development from the Ohio Department of Commerce.

“Rules still under consideration include, among other topics, ownership, security and operations, license renewals, transportation, uninterrupted cannabis supply, patient confidentiality, advertising, fees, THC content, and employee training,” the legislation reads.

“There had been talks for a while that the Department of Commerce was going to combine the two departments,” Xenia Law Director Donnette Fisher told city council Thursday. “The state general assembly was going to pass some laws to combine (medical and recreational marijuana). That never happened.”

The issues that exist with medical marijuana, also exist with non-medical marijuana, Fisher added, namely the conflict in laws between the federal and state level.

Xenia currently prohibits the establishment of medical marijuana dispensaries, and has no pre-existing ones within the city.

Xenia enacted a one-year moratorium on adult-use cannabis operators last December, in order to “review potential impacts of nonmedical operators and understand state rules and guidelines,” per the legislation.

The Drug Policy and Enforcement Center tracks recreational marijuana moratoriums in Ohio. As of this week, a total of 107 moratoriums are active throughout the state, according to the center, with about half of them in jurisdictions with less than 10,000 people.

The 107 municipalities with active moratoriums represent about 14% of Ohio’s population, according to the center.

According to precinct-level data from the Greene County Board of Elections, city of Xenia voters last year supported Issue 2, which legalized recreational marijuana, with 52.46% voting yes.

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