HF4733
Remediated cannabis product defined, and cannabis business required to disclose information related to remediated cannabis products.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF4871
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
This bill defines what counts as a remediated cannabis product and requires clear disclosure about remediation on labels and in advertising. It aims to help consumers know when a product has undergone remediation processes to meet state safety standards.
Definitions
- Remediated cannabis product: any cannabis-derived product (flower, concentrate, extract, or product including dried flower, rosin, edibles, tinctures) that at any point during cultivation, processing, or manufacturing required and underwent a process to reduce or remove contaminants (such as mold, mildew, pesticides, or heavy metals) to comply with safety and testing requirements established by the state office.
Labeling requirements
- Mandatory labeling: remediated cannabis products must follow the labeling requirements in section 342.63.
- conspicuous disclosure on primary packaging and marketing layer: the product’s main package and its marketing label must clearly display the required statement.
Required statement on labels
- Statement content: “This product or its constituent cannabis was produced using REMEDIATED CANNABIS MATERIAL to meet state safety standards.”
- Presentation: the statement must be in a font size no smaller than the required warning under section 342.63 subdivision 2 clause 8 and in a color that contrasts with the background.
Advertising and marketing disclosures
- Mandatory disclosure in all marketing: every marketing advertising and promotional material for a specific remediated cannabis product must include the same statement.
- Coverage: applies to digital advertisements, point-of-sale displays, product menus, online product descriptions, and other marketing materials.
Penalties and enforcement
- Civil penalties: the state office may issue civil penalties for violations of these provisions.
- Fines schedule: the office must adopt a schedule of civil fines, with minimums of $1,000 for a first offense and $5,000 for a second offense within a three-year period; penalties should reflect the seriousness and frequency of violations.
- License impact for repeat violations: if a licensed cultivator or retailer accumulates three or more separate and confirmed violations within five years, the office must suspend or revoke the license under section 342.21.
- Misrepresentation consequence: the office may suspend or revoke a license for a single instance of intentional and knowing misrepresentation of a product’s remediation status.
Relationship to existing law
- The labeling and advertising disclosures must align with and build on existing labeling requirements in section 342.63 and licensing provisions in section 342.21.
Implications and changes from current law
- Adds a new category of disclosure focused on remediated cannabis products.
- Creates mandatory on-label and on-marketing statements about remediation status.
- Establishes a new civil-penalty framework with specific minimum fines.
- Ties enforcement to licensing actions for repeat or serious violations.
- Expands consumer transparency around safety remediation for cannabis products.
Relevant Terms - remediated cannabis product - remediated cannabis material - mold, mildew, pesticides, heavy metals - state safety standards - office (state office) - primary package - marketing layer label - conspicuously display - required statement - This product or its constituent cannabis was produced using REMEDIATED CANNABIS MATERIAL to meet state safety standards - labeling requirements (section 342.63) - advertising and marketing - digital advertisements - point-of-sale displays - product menus - license suspension or revocation - cultivator license (section 342.21) - retailer license (section 342.21) - misrepresentation of remediation status - Minnesota Statutes chapter 342 - civil penalties - minimum fines ($1,000; $5,000) - remediation status
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 26, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Commerce Finance and Policy | |
| Showing the 5 most recent stages. This bill has 1 stages in total. Log in to view all stages | |||||
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Progress through the legislative process
Sponsors
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