From KUT News:
THC gummies, Delta-9 drinks and jars of cured cannabis will stay on Texas store shelves with no legal age restrictions after state lawmakers once again failed to agree on whether to regulate or ban the state’s booming hemp industry.
The Texas Legislature wrapped up its second special session without even adopting a proposed age limit of 21 to buy or sell intoxicating hemp products. While many, if not most, stores voluntarily card their customers, the inaction by lawmakers means Texans of any age can still legally buy hemp-derived cannabinoids.
“My position remains unchanged; the Senate and I are for a total THC ban,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick posted on X Wednesday night. Patrick has said the issue is one of the most important in his long political career.
“I’m not going to legalize marijuana in Texas, and if people want to vote me out of office for it, so be it,” he said in June after Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed the first attempt at a ban passed by the Legislature.
Hemp and marijuana are the same plant. The only difference is an arbitrary legal distinction. Hemp contains less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC, the main ingredient in cannabis that gets people high. But cannabis contains more than 100 other cannabinoids that remain legal, including THCA, which converts to Delta-9 when heated.
Almost 9,000 retail locations — from gas stations to smoke shops to liquor stores — are registered with the state’s health department to sell consumable hemp products, according to records obtained by KUT News. That includes more than 600 stores in Travis County alone.














