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Hawaii House kills recreational marijuana bill again

Efforts to legalize recreational marijuana and establish a retail program in Hawaii have been thwarted again by the Legislature’s more conservative House of Representatives.

House Bill 1246, which would have established a regulatory agency to oversee adult-use and medical marijuana as well as hemp, failed to advance to a full floor vote, according to the Honolulu Civic Beat.

In 2024, after Hawaii’s Senate overwhelmingly approved a bill to establish a recreational market, new regulatory agency and social equity program, the legislation failed to get through the House, where similar efforts have died in the past.

“It’s a disappointment, but we will eventually get there,” Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies for Marijuana Policy Project, told MJBizDaily.

“We’ve had lots of setbacks in other states’ legislatures (including a 2022 veto in Delaware) before passing bills into law.”

O’Keefe was in Hawaii trying to rally support for adult-use legalization and broader medical access.

A Senate companion bill is technically alive, with a looming deadline next week to get out of committee, O’Keefe added.

Other cannabis-related bills have been introduced in the Hawaii Legislature, including expanding medical marijuana access and decriminalization.

Hawaii lawmakers weighing proposals to boost medical marijuana program

A push is underway in the Hawaii Legislature to expand the state’s medical marijuana program after efforts to legalize adult-use again failed to advance.

According to Hawaii News Now, bills in the Senate and the much more conservative House contain several provisions aimed to boost enrollment in the MMJ program while thwarting unlicensed and unregulated supply channels.

Proposals include:

  • Allowing medical professionals to recommend cannabis for patients instead of adhering to a restrictive list of qualifying conditions.
  • Allowing licensed cultivators to wholesale medical marijuana products directly to retailers.
  • Adding dispensaries in rural areas.

Another bill would boost enforcement of illegal CBD stores by requiring licenses, seizing products containing THC and shuttering such establishments, Hawaii News Now reported.

All the legislation, according to lawmakers, is designed to prop up the state’s stagnant MMJ market.

The number of registered medical patients in Hawaii has been gradually falling since at least September 2023.

At the end of February, there were 29,820 in-state patients, down from 31,581 in February 2024, or roughly 5.5%, according to the latest statistics from the state’s health department.

Hawaii licenses another medical cannabis dispensary on Oahu

Hawaii regulators have licensed the state’s 25th medical cannabis dispensary, the 11th on the island of Oahu.

The permit went to Manoa Botanicals, which does business as Noa Botanicals, according to a news release from the state health department.

The Honolulu retailer was slated to begin MMJ sales April 19, the eve of the industry’s biggest retail day of the year, the Star-Advertiser reported.

Here’s a breakdown from the health department: of dispensaries on the main Hawaiian Islands:

  • Hawaii: six.
  • Kauai: two.
  • Maui: six.

The state said in December that it had issued a 25th dispensary license to Cure Oahu.

But since then, Hawaii has seemingly lost a licensed dispensary: Pono Life Sciences Maui at 415 Dairy Road – which lost its license for a month in 2021 – apparently has closed for good since that December announcement.

Pono did not immediately return an MJBizDaily call seeking clarification.

The Noa Botanicals opening comes amid efforts in the Hawaii Legislature to expand the state’s medical marijuana program after efforts to legalize adult-use again failed to advance.

The number of registered MMJ patients in Hawaii has been gradually falling since at least September 2023.

At the end of February, there were 29,820 in-state patients, down from 31,581 in February 2024, or roughly 5.5%, according to the latest statistics from Hawaii’s health department.

However, the state allows visitors with medical marijuana patient cards from other U.S. markets to register for a temporary Hawaii MMJ card.

Hawaii’s medical marijuana industry set to expand after governor’s about-face

Hawaii’s sagging medical marijuana market is set to expand after the governor signed a bill into law that allows for more qualified patients and for dispensaries to sell more products.

It’s a welcome boost for cannabis in Hawaii, where adult-use marijuana legalization failed again this spring.

The June 27 signing of House Bill 302 was unexpected because Gov. Josh Green, himself a physician, indicated as recently as June 24 his intent to veto the bill over privacy concerns.

However, there’s a unique twist: The bill’s language also allows MMJ dispensaries to sell “hemp products.”

Hawaii’s MMJ program remains extremely modest, with roughly 30,000 registered patients as of last fall – a decrease of 15% from a peak of 35,444, according to state data.

In the meantime, Hawaii is experiencing some of the same problems as other states with illicit marijuana sales and competition from hemp-derived THC products.

Many more patients ought to qualify for medical marijuana under HB 302, which:

  • Allows medical professionals to recommend MMJ via telehealth.
  • Allows both physicians and “advanced practice registered nurses” t recommend marijuana for any condition where “the benefit of the medical use of cannabis would likely outweigh the health risks.”
  • Establishes criminal penalties for illegal cannabis sales, including for anyone who posts ads or notices for unlicensed sales online.

In a statement three days before he signed the legislation, Green repeated earlier support for “efforts to expand access to medical cannabis for any medical condition.”

But he also expressed concern that the bill’s allowance for state health officials to review patient records “without warrant constitutes a grave violation of privacy.”

Green did not explain his apparent turnaround in his brief message to state lawmakers indicating his approval of the measure.

MMJ cultivation and sales in Hawaii are limited to holders of only eight vertically integrated business licenses allowed in the state, though each permit holder is allowed to open multiple retail locations.

There were 25 dispensaries throughout the islands as of April, with 11 of them on Oahu, the most populous island.

MMJ sales in Hawaii could reach $73 million in 2025, according to an MJBiz Factbook projection.

Major reforms to medical marijuana program become law

Big changes are coming to Hawaii’s troubled medical marijuana system to make it easier for patients to use cannabis for more conditions legally.
Published: Aug. 15, 2025 at 8:08 PM GMT-6

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Big changes are coming to Hawaii’s troubled medical marijuana system to make it easier for patients to use cannabis for more conditions without resorting to risky or illegal sources.

Hawaii lawmakers rejected the idea of legalizing recreational marijuana in favor of shoring up the medical cannabis system, which is built around highly regulated dispensaries like Aloha Green Apothecary in Mapunapuna.

The legislature took action this year out of concern that the 12-year-old system was failing.

Aloha Green Apothecary president Ty Cheng said while it was laudable that the system developed to deliver effective, safe and tested products, the investment hasn’t paid off.

“I think there was some irrational exuberance about how successful the program could be and what it could become,” he said.

Dr. Clifton Otto is a cannabinoid medicine specialist with many patients in Hawaii. He said dispensaries are unable to provide products many of his patients want and are too expensive.

“They’ve had to make a huge investment in building cultivation facilities from the ground up, which has been a huge expense,” he said.

A committee report on House Bill 302, which became the vehicle for major reform of the industry, said the number of registered patients has been falling, from a peak of about 35,000 to 30,000 and fewer than half are using dispensaries.

Instead, patients grow their own, rely on a caregiver grower or buy on the black market.

After realizing the votes weren’t there in the House for legalizing recreational marijuana for adults, Senate Consumer Protection Jarrett Keohokalole pushed for the dramatic changes to the medical cannabis program.

“It’s clear it’s not working the way everyone would like it to work,” he said.

The new law will make it easier and cheaper to get a medical cannabis card by legalizing telehealth consultation with a doctor or advanced practice registered nurse, setting a formula to cap fees on the initial appointment, and freedom for providers to recommend cannabis for more conditions and side effects.

Andrew Goff, manager of the Department of Health Office of Medical Cannabis Control and Regulation, explained the change.

“If you have a condition that’s not on our defined list of debilitating conditions, but a provider thinks that cannabis could be right for you and could be incorporated into your treatment plan. They are empowered to do that,” he said.

It’s hoped that will mean more customers for the dispensaries.

Aloha Green president Cheng says despite the costs of cultivation, production, quality and potency testing and taxes, their pricing is now competitive.

“We normally see now we see product at about $100 an ounce,” he said. “Which is actually around what the grey market or illicit market would be pricing their product as well.”

But Otto said many patients prefer cannabis products they or their caregivers have grown.

The new law expands what caregivers can do. Prior laws allowed a caregiver to only grow for a single patient. They are now allowing them to grow 10 plants each for up to five patients.

“What we really want to do is just make the whole system more convenient for patients,” Keohokalole said.

The law allows more dispensary licenses and bans large growing cooperatives. That’s a reaction to a cooperative grow site in Mokuleia that claimed to serve over 1,000 patients, but that concerned law enforcement and competed with dispensaries, although its supporters said it provided an essential service.

The law limits shared grow sites to five patients or caregivers on one site.

“So that’s 50 total plants and patients can also collectively pull their resources and grow on one plot, but only up to five patients,” Goff said. “So, it is a limited access that way, but that is to curtail some of the more commercial operations.”

The law was also designed to crackdown on providers who certify patients without enough information about their medical needs, so it makes it clear that the government can examine medical records.

That alarmed patients and providers, like Dr. Otto, and nearly got the bill vetoed.

“We have to realize that the information in these medical records could be potentially incriminating,“ Otto said. “Because there is evidence in there that patients are engaging in the illegal use of a federal schedule 1 controlled substance.”

The manager of the medical cannabis program says the intention was to make sure that providers had meaningful discussions about conditions and side effects and whether cannabis products were safe for them.

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Holiday parades and road closures on Oahu

The parade takes place Saturday at 9 a.m., and the route will begin at Windward Mall, proceed along Kamehameha Highway, and end at Castle High School.
Published: Dec. 6, 2025 at 1:47 AM GMT-6|Updated: 8 hours ago

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – As the holiday season gets into full swing, various parades will begin spreading the holiday cheer.

Throughout December, there will be road and lane closures for major parades approved by the City and County of Honolulu taking place around Oahu.

Dec. 6-7

Saturday, Dec. 6:

Mililani Holiday Parade: Lanes will be closed from 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. It will start at Mililani High School, go to Kipapa Drive, to Moenamanu Street, to Kuahelani Avenue, to Meheula Parkway, to Lanikuhana Avenue, and end at the Mililani Town Center.

Kaneohe Christmas Parade: Lanes will be closed from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and will start at Windward Mall at Haiku Road to Kamehameha Highway, to Kaneohe Bay Drive, and will end at Castle High School.

Street Bikers United-Toys For Tots Caravan: Roads will be closed from 10:30 a.m. to noon. It will start at Magic Island, to Ala Moana Boulevard, to Kalakaua Avenue, to the Waikiki Shell Lots 1 and 4.

Kapolei City Lights Hoolaulea: Roads will close from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. It will take place on Uluohia Street from Kamaaha Avenue to Haumea Street, Kamaaha Avenue from Alohikea Street to Uluohia Street, Alohikea Street from Ala Kahawai Street to Kamaaha Avenue, and Ala Kahawai Street from Uluohia Street to Alohikea Street.

Kapolei City Lights Parade: Roads will close from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Lane closures on Fort Barrette begin at 3:30 p.m., and on Kapolei Parkway at 4 p.m. It will start at Fort Barrette and Kaoplei Parkway, then head west on the mauka side of the road, to end at Kealakapu Street. One lane will be contraflowed on Kapolei Parkway for westbound traffic from Fort Barrette to Kunehi Street.

Sunday, Dec. 7:

Pearl City Christmas Parade: Roads will close at 4 p.m. and will reopen at around 6 p.m. It will start at Momilani Elementary School, go to Hookiekie Street, to Hoomoana Street, to Hoolaulea Street, and end at Pearl City Shopping Center.

Pearl Harbor Memorial Anniversary Parade: Roads close from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. It will take place from Fort DeRussy to Kalakaua Avenue and will end at the grassy area fronting on Kapahulu, Kalakaua, and Monsarrat Avenues fronting the Honolulu Zoo.

Dec. 8-14

Thursday, Dec. 11:

Kapahulu-Moiliili Christmas Parade: Roads will close from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. It will start at Kuhio Elementary, to King Street, to Beretania Street, and will end at Isenberg Street, fronting the Old Stadium Park.

Friday, Dec. 12:

Haleiwa Town Christmas Parade: Roads will close from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. It will start at Weed Circle, go to Kamehameha Highway, through Haleiwa Town, and end at Haleiwa Beach Park.

Saturday, Dec. 13:

Aiea Community Association Christmas Parade: Roads will close at 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. It will start at Pearlridge Elementary School parking lot, go to Moanalua Road, then to Kaamilo Street, to Ulune Street, and end at the Aiea Library on Halewiliko Street.

Waianae Coast Christmas Parade: Roads will close from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. It will start at the Waianae Boat Harbor, go to Farrington Highway, and end at the Waianae Mall.

Waimanalo Christmas Parade: Roads will close from 8:45 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. It will start at Kumuhau Street, go to Humunuiki Street, then to Kalanianole Highway, and end at Waimanalo Beach Park.

Christmas on the Avenue: Roads will be closed from 1 p.m. Saturday to 12 a.m. on Sunday. It will close Nanakuli Avenue between Mano and Piliaau avenues.

Dec. 15-21

Wednesday, Dec. 17:

Chabad of Hawaii (Chanukah) Car Menorah Parade: Roads will close at around 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. It will start at Kaimuki High School, to Kapiolani Boulevard, to Kuhio Avenue, to Namahana Street, to Ala Wai Boulevard, to Keoniana Street, to Kalakaua Avenue, and end at King Kalakaua Park.

Saturday, Dec. 20:

Ewa Beach Lions Club Christmas Parade: Lanes close from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. It will start at the Campbell High School parking lot, to North Road, then to Fort Weaver Road, to Kuhina Street, to Hanakahi Street, then back to North Road, and end at Campbell High School.

Olomana Christmas Parade: Lanes will close from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. It will start at Maunawili Elementary School, go to Ulupii Street, then to Ulupuni Street, to Uluohao Street, to Uluhala Street, to Ulupuni Street, to Ulukou Street, and end at the elementary school.

Moanalua Christmas Parade: The event begins at 6:30 p.m. and ends at 8 p.m. It will start at the Moanalua High School parking lot, to Ala Ilima Street, to Ala Lilikoi Street, to Likini Street, to Ala Napuunani Street, and end back at the high school.

Click here to see the city’s full list of major parades and events taking place during December.