Cannabis Overproduction in Oregon Could Lead to Federal Crackdown – News

Photo via Sgt. Brianne Roudebush

Cannabis farms in Oregon are producing three times more weed than the state’s residents consume, creating tons of excess product that are being smuggled to other states,Oregon currently has 900 licensed recreational cultivators, and over a thousand more growers have applied for licenses. Html” target=” blank”> in an editorial for The Oregonian, Williams wrote that Oregon postal agents seized over 2,500 pounds of weed that was being shipped out of state in 2017, along with $1.2 million in related cash. “Overproduction creates a powerful profit incentive, driving product from both state-licensed and unlicensed marijuana producers into black and gray markets across the country,” Williams wrote. “This lucrative supply attracts cartels and other criminal networks into Oregon and in turn brings money laundering, violence, and environmental degradation. “

Former Oregon State University professor Seth Crawford told The Independent that the state created this problem for themselves by failing to cap the number of recreational growers. “It was a system designed for failure,” he said, because Oregon “created this huge industry that has nowhere to put its product.

Under the Obama administration, the federal government took a hands-off approach to state-legal cannabis – an approach that the Justice Department continued during the first year of the Trump administration. Sessions has now given Justice Department officials greater leeway to interfere with canna-legal states, especially those that they feel are supplying black market product to states that continue to prohibit marijuana use.

In order to avoid federal intervention, states will need to work to crack down on overproduction on their own. In Colorado, the ballot measure that legalized recreational weed allowed each adult to grow a whopping 99 cannabis plants each, creating the potential for massive overproduction. Oregon officials have not yet announced any solutions for their overproduction problem, but Governor Kate Brown has reassured the local cannabis industry that Williams has promised her that “lawful Oregon businesses remain stakeholders in this conversation and not targets of law enforcement,” according to

About Merry Jane

is the definitive cannabis resource on culture, news, video, food and style dedicated to expressing a new cannabis mentality. Through exclusive content and relatable perspectives, MERRY JANE highlights the best of cannabis lifestyle while also offering vital, interactive tools to explore the new frontier of products, dispensaries and community.