Arkansas cannabis ballot measure fails to qualify for November

The secretary of state ruled that the number of valid signatures turned in by the campaign fell just short of the threshold.

A proposed ballot measure in Arkansas to broaden the existing medical marijuana industry has fallen short of the number of signatures needed to make this year’s ballot, the secretary of state ruled, meaning voters won’t get to weigh in on the proposal.

Secretary of State John Thurston announced Monday that Arkansans for Patient Access – the campaign that gathered the signatures – submitted 88,040 valid voter signatures, just shy of the required threshold of 90,704, KUAR reported.

The campaign initially said it had submitted more than 114,000 signatures in July, before being given a 30-day “cure” period to add even more. That brought the total to more than 150,000 signatures, 4029 News reported.

The failed ballot measure would have made it easier for patients to qualify to purchase medical marijuana by expanding the list of eligible medical ailments, legalized home cultivation, and increased the number of health care providers allowed to write patient recommendations.

An effort to legalize recreational cannabis in the state failed in 2022.

Arkansans for Patient Access promised to take the secretary of state to court over the decision, KUAR reported, after several signatures were disqualified in a move that the campaign deemed “arbitrary”: A representative of the company that hired paid canvassers to collect the signatures signed off on their training rather than a sponsor of the amendment.

“Excluding 20,000 valid signatures collected during the cure period – due to an arbitrary, last-minute clerical rule change – is unfair and contrary to the democratic process,” the campaign said in a statement to KUAR.

As it stands, recreational cannabis legalization ballot questions will appear before voters in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota. Nebraska voters will also get to decide whether to legalize medical marijuana.

Avatar photo

John Schroyer

John Schroyer has been a reporter since 2006, initially with a focus on politics, and covered the 2012 Colorado campaign to legalize marijuana. He has written about the cannabis industry specifically since 2014, after being on hand for the first-ever legal cannabis sales on New Year’s Day that year in Denver. John has covered subsequent marijuana market launches in California and Illinois, has written about every aspect of the marijuana trade, and was part of the team that built the cannabis industry’s first-ever trade show, MJBizCon. He joined Green Market Report in 2022.


Get the latest cannabis news delivered right to your inbox

The Morning Rise

Unpack the industry with the daily cannabis newsletter for business leaders.

 Sign up


About Us

The Green Market Report focuses on the financial news of the rapidly growing cannabis industry. Our target approach filters out the daily noise and does a deep dive into the financial, business and economic side of the cannabis industry. Our team is cultivating the industry’s critical news into one source and providing open source insights and data analysis


READ MORE