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Voters in the eastern Montana county are deciding this week whether to reverse the ban on recreational marijuana sales there.
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The state's rulemaking process for the sale of recreational marijuana is again moving ahead. It was delayed after Montana lawmakers intervened last week with last-minute concerns.
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Reversing an earlier decision, Yellowstone County commissioners agreed to put the question of whether to overturn legal recreational marijuana sales up for a vote.
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Montana lawmakers are pausing the state’s rulemaking process for the new recreational marijuana industry slated to come online January 1. There is bipartisan concern that the state isn’t following legislators' intent for the policy.
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Montana’s marijuana regulators are eliminating two widely criticized proposals tied to the state’s January rollout of legal cannabis sales.
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The same bill that established the framework of legal, recreational cannabis sales in Montana also allows for the resentencing or expungement of marijuana-related crimes.
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Recreational cannabis sales begin in less than two months in half of Montana’s counties. Regulators and retailers alike are scrambling to finalize last minute details before that Jan. 1 deadline.
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Ahead of Montana’s upcoming first legal recreational marijuana sales, lawmakers this week told state regulators to reconsider several potential rules.
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Unofficial election results show Missoula, Park and Yellowstone counties each approved a 3% local tax on recreational marijuana.
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Unofficial results show recreational marijuana sales won't be allowed in Billings next year, but voters in Yellowstone County support taxing sales of both recreational and medical marijuana.