Governor Abigail Spanberger has vetoed Virginia’s long-debated marijuana retail legislation, halting plans to create a regulated adult-use cannabis market and exposing divisions between legalization advocates, hemp businesses, and state leadership over the future of cannabis in the Commonwealth.
The veto of HB 642 and SB 542 leaves Virginia in the same legal gray area it has occupied since marijuana possession was legalized in 2021: adults can legally possess, share, and grow cannabis, but there is still no legal retail market for recreational sales.
In a statement released Tuesday, the CannaJustice Coalition, which includes Marijuana Justice, RISE for Youth, Justice Forward Virginia, and Virginia Student Power Network, called the veto “profoundly disappointing” and accused the administration of extending confusion around cannabis policy instead of moving toward a safer and more equitable system.
“For five years, Virginia has been stuck in a limbo where adults can legally possess, share and grow cannabis, but there is still no regulated way to purchase it,” the coalition wrote.
The group argued the decision undermines broader cannabis reform efforts, including resentencing measures for marijuana-related convictions and recent protections for parents who legally use cannabis.
“By rejecting the retail bill, the Governor has chosen to extend that chaos rather than move us toward a transparent, accountable retail system that centers public health, public safety and justice,” the statement continued.
But the veto also revealed a growing split inside Virginia’s cannabis and hemp industries themselves.
Just days before the veto, a coalition of hemp businesses, trade groups, attorneys, and retailers sent a letter to Governor Spanberger urging her to reject the legislation unless significant changes were made. Signers included the Cannabis Small Business Association, Virginia Hemp Coalition, District Hemp Botanicals, Northern Virginia Hemp Co., and Richmond-based retailer Kulture.
Rather than opposing legalization outright, the letter argued the legislation heavily favored large corporate cannabis operators while leaving existing hemp businesses vulnerable to aggressive enforcement and economic collapse.
“We urge a measured path that sustains a responsible federally legal hemp sector while broader regulatory structures are finalized,” the letter stated.
The coalition specifically warned that the proposed market structure offered “limited realistic plant-touching opportunities for small and independent businesses” and could devastate existing hemp operators who had invested heavily under Virginia’s evolving hemp laws.
The group also asked the governor to delay the retail market rollout until supply chains and licensing pathways were better established for smaller businesses and farmers.
“A market structure that gives advantages to large, well-capitalized corporate operators over Virginia’s existing small businesses would undermine the very communities this legislation is meant to serve,” the letter stated.
That tension has increasingly defined Virginia’s cannabis debate over the past two years. While legalization advocates have pushed for a fully regulated adult-use market with criminal justice reforms attached, many operators fear they are being squeezed out by legislation that could ultimately consolidate the industry into the hands of a smaller number of highly capitalized companies.
Governor Spanberger had previously proposed amendments to the legislation that would have delayed implementation timelines, increased penalties tied to illegal sales, and adjusted licensing structures. Lawmakers rejected many of those amendments during the General Assembly’s reconvened session earlier this spring before sending the original bills back to her desk.
Supporters of the bills argued Virginia was missing out on tax revenue, jobs, and economic opportunities while neighboring states continue expanding legal cannabis industries. Opponents and skeptics argued the rollout still lacked sufficient protections for existing hemp businesses and small operators.
For now, Virginia’s retail cannabis market remains stalled, continuing a years-long cycle where legalization exists in theory for possession and home cultivation, but not for legal adult-use sales.
Advocates on both sides now appear likely to return to the General Assembly next session with very different visions for what Virginia’s eventual cannabis economy should look like.
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