If marijuana is rescheduled—as President Donald Trump directed in a recent executive order—congressional researchers say the ...
President Donald Trump on Thursday signed an executive order directing that cannabis be moved to a lower drug schedule, a step aimed at easing restrictions on research and lowering its severity, while ...
The new proposed federal classification of marijuana would allow more research, and would let cannabis businesses take normal ...
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Differing opinions are coming from leaders and advocates in West Virginia regarding President Trump’s new ...
The change would not legalize the drug on the federal level, but would ease barriers on research using cannabis.
The move to reclassify cannabis from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug could spark new studies into pain, aging and women's health, Dr. Staci Gruber tells GBH's All Things Considered.
President Trump's executive order on marijuana's classification could bring changes to Oklahoma On April, President Trump ...
For years, many in the medical and public health communities have anxiously awaited the long-overdue federal Controlled Substances Act reclassification of marijuana to characterize it more accurately.
President Trump is expected to sign an order that would reschedule marijuana to a lower drug classification, according to two sources, in one of the most significant changes to drug policy in decades.
Earlier this month, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to move marijuana to a Schedule III drug.
Moving marijuana to Schedule III places in the same category as Tylenol with codeine or anabolic steroids, allowing accepted medical use and a lower potential for abuse while keeping it regulated.
Colorado’s world-class marijuana industry drives out criminals and cartels and is supporting Colorado businesses and jobs ...