Texas Lawmakers

Protect Texas Hemp

Protecting the Future of Hemp in Texas

Hemp Is Legal, Regulated, and Working for Texans

As Texas prepares for a special legislative session, it’s important to understand the legal framework, the economic impact, and what’s truly at stake for farmers, small businesses, and consumers.

Legislators

In the upcoming special session, we urge you to vote in favor of smart regulations that allow the Texas hemp industry to continue thriving while putting in place the safeguards we’ve consistently called for. Small businesses, farmers, and consumers are counting on you.

Background

The 2018 Farm Bill, signed by President Trump, federally legalized hemp by defining it as cannabis containing no more than 0.3% Delta-9 THC. This distinction separates legal hemp from illegal marijuana under U.S. law. Hemp and marijuana are the same plant species (Cannabis sativa L.), but legality is based on THC content.

Smart Regulation

Texas hemp industry leaders support strong regulation to protect consumers, ensure product safety, and prevent youth access. But a total ban would bring legal challenges, fuel black market activity, and criminalize federally legal products harming the very people smart policy should protect.

The People’s Voice

Texans Support Keeping Hemp-Derived THC Legal

Regulatory Risk

What’s at Stake

The hemp industry supports thousands of jobs, businesses, and critical state revenue.

0 Billion $

In annual wages supported by the hemp industry

0 +

Jobs supported by the hemp industry

0 +

Licensed Texas businesses

0 Million $

In projected lost tax revenue

Texas Hemp is Already Regulated

Hemp products are governed under Chapter 443 of the Texas Health and Safety Code, which outlines clear requirements for safety, testing, and labeling.

Top Concerns By Legislators

As a career law enforcement official, I understand the desire to protect the public, and especially our youth. But this bill would only stand in the way of upholding public health and safety.
cropped-UPDATED-texas-hemp-logo-green-circle-1-01.webp

Retired Lt. Diane Goldstein

21-year police veteran

Prohibition simply drives the current market underground, and would make rational regulation impossible.
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Rob Curran of Dow Jones and Doug Henry

University of North Texas

A Better Path Forward

Additional Regulations

  • Sets the minimum purchase age for consumable hemp products at 21 years old.
  • Requires reliable age verification for online sales.
  • Establishes criminal penalties for knowingly selling to underage buyers.
  • Requires comprehensive lab testing for cannabinoid content, contaminants (heavy metals, pesticides, microbes), mycotoxins, residual solvents, and ensures labs meet ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation standards.
  • Mandates batch numbers, ingredients, allergens, manufacturer info, certification of compliant THC levels, and contact details on every package.
  • Requires tamper-evident, child-resistant packaging for all consumable hemp products.
  • Labels must include scannable QR codes or URLs linking to certificates of analysis.
  • Prohibits edibles shaped like humans, animals, fruit, toys, or any shape appealing to minors.
  • Bans packaging with cartoons, superhero-like characters, images of children, or anything that would attract kids.
  • Outlaws packaging that resembles trademarked non-hemp products or falsely implies the absence of cannabinoids.
  • Allows transport/delivery of compliant hemp products by parties other than the manufacturer, with proper documentation, without additional licensing requirements.
  • Prohibits sale of non-compliant products or products unsafe for consumption (exceeding THC limits of containing harmful contaminants).
  • Clarifies that hemp derived cannabinoids like CBD are considered food, not controlled substances or adulterants.
  • Bans issuance of hemp production licenses to entities tied to China, Iran, North Korea, or Russia (or owned by governments/citizens), to protect national security.

A Message to Our Lawmakers:

Texans are watching.

They’re veterans, parents, grand parents, farmers, small business owners — and they’re relying on you to stand up for freedomeconomic opportunity, and common sense regulation.

SB3 does not represent what Texans believe in. This bill and similar ban bills would eliminate access to safe, federally legal products, destroy over 53,000 jobs, and hand regulatory power to special interests.

You have a choice.

You can stand with your constituents — the people who elected you — and vote NO on these overreaching bans. You can help refine the system with smart, enforceable rules that keep Texans safe while preserving access and freedom.

We’re not asking for special treatment.
We’re asking you to protect what Texans already built — and what’s already working.

🟩 Vote NO on banning hemp products.
🟩 Stand for freedom. Stand with Texans.

“We’re not asking for special treatment – just the freedom to choose safe, legal options that help us to be our best selves.”

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