Summary of Bill A 4579
Overview
- Bill: A 4579
- Title: Relates to appointments to the cannabis control board, and to oversight of registered cannabis organizations
- Sponsor: Josh Jensen (primary)
- Status: REFERRED TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
- Introduced: February 4, 2025
- Related legislation: A 10366 (prior-session), A 2904 (prior-session); S 1631 (companion; listed twice)
Note: The text of the bill is not provided here. This summary reflects the bill’s title, sponsorship, status, and related bills, along with the likely scope suggested by those elements.
Purpose and intent (inferred from the title)
A 4579 appears designed to modify:
- How members are appointed to the cannabis control board (CCB)
- How registered cannabis organizations (RCOs) are overseen
The aim is typically to adjust governance, accountability, and regulatory oversight within the state’s cannabis program.
Key provisions (subject to the actual text)
Because the bill text is not included in the information provided, the following are common provisions such bills tend to address. These should be confirmed by consulting the official bill language:
- Appointments to the Cannabis Control Board
- Criteria for board membership (qualifications, conflicts of interest)
- Appointment process (who appoints, timelines, vacancies)
- Terms of service, reappointment rules, and removal procedures
- Number of seats and any chair/leadership structure
- Oversight of Registered Cannabis Organizations
- Enhanced reporting and compliance requirements for RCOs
- Audits, inspections, and enforcement powers
- Standards for recordkeeping, financial reporting, and governance
- Grounds for license suspension, revocation, or penalties
- Conflict-of-interest and ethics provisions related to RCOs
- Administrative and procedural changes
- Interaction between the CCB and other state agencies
- Sunset or review provisions, if any
- Effective dates and implementation timelines
Who would be affected
- Cannabis Control Board members and applicants seeking appointment
- Registered cannabis organizations (RCOs) subject to increased oversight and reporting
- Cannabis industry licensees and applicants
- State agencies involved in cannabis regulation and enforcement
- Stakeholders and advocacy groups monitoring regulatory governance
Procedural and timeline aspects
- Introduced and first referred to Economic Development on February 4, 2025
- Status indicates the bill is in committee consideration; no final action reflected here
- Given companion bills and prior-session related bills, there may be ongoing discussion across chambers
- Next steps typically include committee hearings, potential amendments, votes in the committee, and floor consideration if advanced
Additional notes
- For a precise understanding of A 4579’s substantive changes, read the official bill text and any fiscal notes or amendments filed in committee.
- Track its progress through the Economic Development committee and any related Senate companion (S 1631) to anticipate potential passage or revisions.