Updates the Rhode Island Cannabis Act to remove the current requirement to express cannabinoids as the dry-weight percentages.
Plain English Summary
AI-generatedPlain-English Summary
This bill makes a technical change to Rhode Island's Cannabis Act by removing a specific rule about how cannabis products must display their chemical content on labels. Currently, the law requires that cannabinoids — the active chemical compounds in cannabis, such as THC and CBD — must be listed as a percentage of the product's dry weight. This bill would eliminate that specific requirement.
The change affects cannabis businesses, including growers, manufacturers, and retailers, as well as consumers who rely on product labels to understand what they are purchasing. By removing the dry-weight percentage requirement, the state would give cannabis regulators and businesses more flexibility in how they measure and communicate cannabinoid content. This could allow for labeling methods that may be more accurate or easier to understand for certain product types, such as edibles, oils, or tinctures, where dry-weight percentages may not be the most practical or meaningful measurement.
It is worth noting that this bill does not eliminate the requirement to disclose cannabinoid content altogether — it simply removes the rule about *how* that content must be expressed. The bill has cleared a House committee and is currently scheduled for consideration by the full House. Specific rules about what measurement standards would replace the dry-weight requirement would likely be determined by state regulators following the bill's passage.
This summary is AI-generated for informational purposes. Always refer to the official bill text for legal accuracy.
Sponsor
Legislative History
Placed on House Calendar (04/09/2026)
Apr 3, 2026Committee recommends passage
Apr 2, 2026Scheduled for consideration (04/02/2026)
Mar 27, 2026Committee recommended measure be held for further study
Mar 12, 2026Scheduled for hearing and/or consideration (03/12/2026)
Mar 6, 2026Introduced, referred to House Corporations
Feb 12, 2026