RELATED: Ross Twp. puts temporary ban on medical marijuana
“The law hasn’t been written, the restrictions haven’t been put in place,” he said to the Journal-News. “We don’t want to stop something that may be good for the community but we also don’t want something to happen that may be bad for the community. We want to understand more about what’s going on, and at this point there’s not a lot of information.”
Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed into law last year a bill that legalizes marijuana for medicinal uses, including cancer, traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder or chronic pain. It allows multiple forms of medical marijuana to be sold, such as edibles, oils, patches and vaporizing, but smoking the plant is not allowed. Neither are home-grow operations.
So far in Butler County, Hamilton, Middletown and Fairfield have banned the sale of the drug — and Middletown and Fairfield have also banned cultivation and production of medical marijuana — and Liberty, Fairfield, Ross and West Chester townships have placed moratoriums on the industry.
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