California Medical Cannabis Edibles: What’s Okay and What’s Not

California Medical Cannabis Edibles: What’s Okay and What’s Not
California cannabis edibles: just say no to butter

Ifyou missed our webinar last week on Californias new medical cannabis rules and you just cant wait for us to publish the recording here on the blog (coming soon!), this post will deal with Californias proposed medical cannabis manufacturing rules for edibles, on which we received a ton of great questions. To get started, a couple of key definitions from the rules:

Manufacture means the production, preparation, propagation, or compounding of cannabis products. The term manufacture includes the following:

  • Extraction processes;
  • Infusion processes;
  • Packaging or repackaging of manufactured medical cannabis or medical cannabis products.

Edible Cannabis Product means manufactured cannabis intended to be used, in whole or in part, for human consumption.

In addition to extensive sanitation, recall, customer complaint and operational requirements for edibles manufacturers, the proposed rules include quite a list of prohibited products and based on our experience in other states with regulated cannabis, we anticipate the list will only grow over time. Here is a sampling of some of the products that will not be allowed under the proposed manufacturing rules:

  1. Cannabis-infused alcoholic beverages;
  2. Cannabis products containing any non-cannabinoid additive that increases potency, toxicity or addictive potential, or that would create an unsafe combination with other psychoactive substances, including nicotine and caffeine;
  3. Cannabis products that must be held below 41 degrees Fahrenheit to be safe for human consumption;
  4. Vacuum packed products;
  5. Canned cannabis products;
  6. Cannabis-infused juice;
  7. Perishable bakery products that must be held at temperatures below 41 degrees Fahrenheit, including cream or custard-filled pies, pies or pastries which consist in whole or in part of milk or milk products, eggs, or synthetic fillings, or meat-filled pies or pastries;
  8. Dairy products of any kind (yes, this appears to include butter);
  9. Meat products;
  10. Seafood products.

For obvious reasons, the issue of whether or not cannabis-infused butter will be allowed is a big one. Though cannabis butter would be prohibited under the current draft rules, weve seen other states, like Washington, carve out exceptions for products made with cannabis butter. However, even Washington prohibits selling cannabis butter as a stand-alone product.

One other glaring omission from the current rules is a prohibition on cannabis products that appeal to children, although this legislation is likely coming down the pipeline. Many states prohibit products like ...

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