Hemp Alert: Updates from Florida, Tennessee & Minnesota

Hemp Regs Florida Minnesota Tennessee

Hemp Industry Highlights: Your Weekly Spotlight

Florida Hemp Alert: Your Voice Needed Now!

Florida’s hemp industry is at a pivotal juncture with the passage of Senate Bill 1698 by the legislature, setting the stage for potential sweeping changes. Despite the tight vote, reflecting the community’s strong advocacy, the bill’s current form threatens to significantly contract the hemp products market, impacting retailers and farmers alike.

The spotlight now turns to Governor Ron DeSantis, known for his support of small businesses, who has the power to veto this legislation. With the U.S. Hemp Roundtable spearheading a campaign to encourage a veto, your participation is crucial. This is our last stand to prevent the bill from becoming law.

Act now to protect the future of the hemp industry in Florida. Your voice can make a difference in this critical moment. Join the effort to urge Governor DeSantis to side with small businesses and veto Senate Bill 1698. The time to act is now—let’s unite to safeguard our industry’s prosperity.

Take Action with the Hemp Roundtable

Tennessee’s Tug-of-War: THC-A and the Future of Hemp Business

Tennessee’s Department of Agriculture is currently drafting regulations that have stirred unease among hemp business owners, especially regarding the treatment of THC-A (tetrahydrocannabinolic acid) in hemp-derived products. Following the enactment of a law regulating the sale of such products to individuals over the age of 21, the state’s contemplation to impose restrictions on THC-A has raised alarms. THC-A currently constitutes a significant portion of the hemp market in Tennessee. This regulatory shift threatens to undercut local businesses by driving consumers to out-of-state or online markets, where Tennessee’s regulations do not apply, potentially sidelining a thriving industry built around these products.

The backlash from the business community was evident during a Department of Agriculture hearing, where the proposed THC-A restrictions were met with widespread criticism. Over 2,000 written comments have been submitted, many highlighting the dire consequences for local hemp retailers and the broader industry if these restrictions go into effect. With THC-A products making up a substantial share of the market, the proposed rules could dramatically impact the viability of many businesses, spurring concerns over a shift towards the black market or loss of sales to other states. As the department reviews feedback with a July 1 deadline for implementing new regulations, Tennessee’s hemp industry stakeholders are closely watching, hoping for a regulatory outcome that supports the growth and sustainability of their businesses.

Minnesota’s Hemp Market: Stricter Oversight on Horizon

 Minnesota’s shift towards legal adult-use cannabis has placed the hemp industry under heightened scrutiny. With the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM) and the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) joining forces, a new enforcement era begins, focusing on the illicit sale of cannabis flower. This initiative emerges as the state aligns its cannabis and hemp markets with legal adulthood, setting a precedent for the regulation of hemp-derived products.

Amidst this transition, the sale of raw cannabis flower remains unauthorized, pending the distribution of OCM business licenses, prompting a clampdown on retailers exploiting regulatory gaps to market full-strength hemp products as compliant offerings.

Central to this enforcement is the OCM’s commitment to upholding THC limits, as mandated by both state and federal law. The forthcoming inspections aim to ensure that hemp products do not surpass the legal THC concentration, emphasizing post-decarboxylation levels where THCA could convert into psychoactive delta-9 THC. The regulations extend to edible cannabinoid products, mandating that they contain no more than five milligrams of tetrahydrocannabinol per serving and a total of 50 milligrams per package. Violations could result in significant repercussions, including fines up to $1 million and potential impacts on future licensure. This regulatory rigor underscores the imperative for retailers to diligently verify their product’s compliance, as Minnesota steers towards a secure, legal cannabis framework, ensuring the hemp market’s integrity and consumer safety

Recent Articles

“Winter rain Now tell me why Summers fade And roses die.” – Bob Weir, “Weather Report Suite”
For years, Jennifer Mansour felt them coming. “You can’t stop one,” she said. “As soon as I’d notice that the lights felt a little too bright, I knew I was done for. I’d tell my boss, and then I’d get in the car and pop on my sunglasses because I could feel another one coming on, and I couldn’t do a thing to stop it.”
We love a good music festival here at HQ Magazine. Now that the major music festivals in the U.S. are starting to release their initial lineups, we figured it would be a great time to review some of the best 2026 music festivals in cannabis-friendly states.
An old adage tells us not to judge a book by its cover, but A Woman’s Guide to Cannabis: Using Marijuana to Feel Better, Look Better, Sleep Better–and Get High Like a Lady makes a powerful statement about the role of beauty and femininity in the cannabis industry before you even read the first page.
Sometimes, it’s good to be obsessed. In an industry heavy with similar products, it’s often the little things on the margins that separate great products from good ones.
Even without the representation and recognition they deserve, women have always been at the center of the cannabis movement.
There are objects Americans buy because they need them, and objects Americans buy because they let them be a certain kind of person. A perfectly functional version exists, usually for a fraction of the price. But the other version comes with a name, a story, and a reason to pay extra.
Walk into any warehouse rave, desert gathering, or rooftop after-hours in 2026, and you’ll feel it: the psychedelic underground is back, louder, weirder, and far more self-aware than its ‘60s predecessor ever imagined.