Some advocates viewed Fenberg’s goal with suspicion, as they have since word of the bill began to spread in February. “The bill basically is striving to implement Prop 122 in a way that makes sense and can be facilitated in a successful way,” Fenberg said Wednesday. SB23-290, sponsored by Senate President Steve Fenberg, seeks to implement Proposition 122, the ballot measure approved by voters in November that legalized “magic mushrooms” compounds psilocybin and psilocin for medicinal use and cleared the way for healing centers to open and offer natural medical services.įenberg has said he wants to enact the “spirit” of the ballot measure - which also decriminalized the personal use, sharing or growing of certain substances - by clarifying parts of the ballot measure and ensuring it makes sense in the state’s existing regulatory framework. Lawmakers are aiming to codify how Colorado’s newly legal psychedelics industry will take shape with a bill introduced in the state Senate on Tuesday that would shift rule-making power to a different agency, clarify penalties for unlawful activity and set limits on how much psilocybin an individual can cultivate for personal use. Digital Replica Edition Home Page Close Menu
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