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WEEK 13 UPDATE- You Can’t Pass

One cannabis related measure made it through Committee of the Whole on Wednesday April 15. But do not expect any cannabis bills to hit the House floor yet. Right now, the board is frozen.

No Budget, No Bills

Governor Katie Hobbs drew a hard line Monday. No budget deal, no bills. She says if Republicans do not bring a real plan to the table, she will veto just about everything that hits her desk. Her office paused budget talks weeks ago. Since then, the Republican majority keeps saying they have a plan, but nothing real has shown up. Back in January, Hobbs vetoed a GOP bill and rolled out her own tax cut package, one she says actually targets the middle class. At that point, her team expected a bipartisan budget. That ended March 20 when negotiations stopped.

If this feels familiar, it should. In May 2021, then Governor Doug Ducey dropped 22 vetoes in one day, including four cannabis bills, and made it clear nothing moves without a budget. Same playbook. Different timing. Ducey waited until the end. Hobbs locks it down now to force a deal.

Movement Without Progress

Regardless of Monday’s announcement, bills still moved around the Capitol, but nothing controversial made it to Third Read in either chamber. Governor Hobbs has a record here. If a bill does not have strong bipartisan support, she vetoes it. Some call her the veto queen. She vetoed 174 bills in 2025 and has already stacked up 45 this year. Most of the controversial measures fall into that category, including all of the cannabis bills. That puts every cannabis bill in the danger zone.

So what happens to the cannabis bills still in play?

SB 1641, the marijuana cultivation and producer license bill, and SB 1128, the rural marijuana license expansion, both sit in House Rules right now. Even if the gatekeeper lets them move, they only land in Committee of the Whole. No final vote.

SB 1725, the marijuana smoke and odor bill, the one raising Voter Protection Act concerns, already cleared Rules and now waits on COW. That is its next move, and its last one for now, before it stalls out waiting for Third Read.

Then there is SB 1476, the bill that would make substance use during pregnancy a felony on top of triggering a Department of Child Safety case. That one actually hit House COW this week. It has split cleanly along party lines since the Senate, with Republicans backing it and Democrats opposing it.

The Reality Check

But here is the reality. Getting through COW right now does not mean much. Getting to Third Read is about as likely as Willie Nelson quitting weed, as long as Governor Katie Hobbs keeps the pressure on about the budget plan.

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What that means going forward is legislators can line up the pieces and make their moves, but they cannot pass “Go” until Governor Hobbs signs off on a Republican majority budget plan.

And even then, she can still veto and flip the whole board.

At A Glance

SB1476- Prenatal Substance Abuse Felony
Waiting on House Third Read

SB1725- Marijuana Smoking Nuisance
Waiting on House Committee Of Whole

SB1641- Marijuana Producer Licenses
Waiting on House Rules

SB1128- (newly) Marijuana Rural Licenses
Waiting on House Rules

Details

SB1476 Child Neglect; Prenatal Substance Exposure

Waiting on House Third Read
01/29/2026 Senate First Read
01/29/2026 Assigned Senate Judiciary and Elections
02/02/2026 Senate Second Read
02/18/2026 Passed Senate Judiciary and Elections (4-2-1)
02/23/2026 Passed Senate Rules
02/23/2026 Senate Caucus
02/26/2026 Senate(COW) Committee Of Whole
02/26/2026 Passed Senate Third Read (16-14-1)
02/27/2026 Transmit to House
03/09/2026 House First Read
03/09/2026 Assigned House Judiciary Committee
03/10/2026 House Second Read
3/25/2026 Passed House Judiciary Committee (6-2-1)
3/30/2026 Passed House Rules Committee (8-0)
03/31/2026 House Caucus
04/15/2026 Passed House Committee Of Whole (COW)
Makes it a crime of child neglect in Arizona by making it a Class 6 felony for a person who has custody of a child to engage in conduct that harms the child and constitutes neglect as defined in existing law. It also establishes an affirmative defense for the child’s mother if she completed alcohol or drug treatment during pregnancy.
Sections Affected:
13-3619.01 Added
Sponsor:
Bolick Prime
Voter Protection Act Prop 103- No (but might need to be)

Senate Engrossed Version

SB 1641 Marijuana Producers; Licensure

Waiting on House Rules
No Movement
01/30/2026 Introduced Senate
02/05/2026 Senate First Read
02/05/2026 Assigned Senate Regulatory Affairs and Government Efficiency (RAGE)
02/18-2026 Passed Senate Regulatory Affairs and Government Efficiency (RAGE) (vote 8-0-0)
03/11/2026 Due Pass Senate Rules
03/11/2026 Caucus
03/11/2026 Due Pass as Amended Senate (COW) Committee Of Whole
03/11/2026 Passed Senate Third Read (23-5-2)
03/16/2026 House First Read
03/16/2026 Assigned House Commerce Committee
03/17/2026 House Second Read
03/24/2026 Passed House Commerce Committee (7-3)
A marijuana producer is a licensed entity that can cultivate, process, manufacture, package, and store marijuana and marijuana products at a single location, but cannot sell or transfer them directly to consumers. Applications for these licenses will open on January 1, 2029, but until January 1, 2032, only entities with contracts established by January 1, 2026 with a marijuana establishment, nonprofit dispensary, or management company are eligible. During this period, licenses cannot be transferred or subleased, and unlicensed entities are prohibited from cultivating or manufacturing at producer sites. Beginning in 2030, the department will review market conditions annually and may issue additional licenses if it determines consumers would benefit. Marijuana producers are subject only to the same rules as marijuana establishments unless the law specifically provides otherwise.
Sections Affected:
36-2850 Amended
36-2854 Amended
36-2857 Amended
36-2858 Amended
36-2859 Amended
36-2860 Amended
36-2861 Amended
36-2864 Amended
36-2865 Amended
Sponsor:
Payne
VPA- Voter Protection Act (Prop 105): Yes

MORE INFO
SENATE FACT SHEET: 02/16/2026 RAGE
Adopted Amendments Senate
SENATE FACT SHEET: 03/11/2026 RAGE As Passed COW

SB1725: Marijuana Smoke; Public; Private Nuisance

Waiting on House Committee of Whole (COW)
02/04/2026 Senate Introduced
02/05/2026 Senate First Read
02/05/2026 Assigned Senate Judiciary (JUD)
02/20/2026 Passed Senate Senate Judiciary and Elections (JUDE) (vote 5-2-0)
02/25/2026 Passed Senate Rules (5-4-0)
02/25/2026 Senate Caucus
03/03/2026 Due Passed as Amended Senate (COW) Committee Of Whole
03/09/2026 Senate Third Read Passed (20-9-1)
03/16/2026 House First Read
03/16/2026 Assigned House Judiciary Committee
03/17/2026 House Senond Read
3/25/2026 Passed House Judiciary Committee (8-1-0-1)
03/30/2026 Passed House Rules Committee (5-3-0)
03/31/2026 House Caucus
Expands Arizona’s nuisance laws to explicitly treat excessive marijuana smoke and odor as a type of “crime” for purposes of declaring a residential property a nuisance, allowing affected residents, homeowner/property owner associations, and government attorneys to sue to abate the activity, with notice procedures and potential cost liens if an owner who knows about the activity fails to act. The bill also amends the criminal and public nuisance statutes to create presumptions that producing excessive marijuana smoke and odor endangers others’ health/safety (criminal nuisance) and is injurious, offensive, and interferes with property enjoyment (public nuisance)
Sections Affected:
12-991 Amended
13-2908 Amended
13-2917 Amended
Sponsor:
Mesnard
VPA- Voter Protection Act (Prop 105)– NO, but should be

MORE INFO
SENATE FACT SHEET: 02/16/2026 JUDE
SENATE FACT SHEET: 03/03/2026 JUDE As Passed COW
Senate Engrossed Version

SB1128 (now) Marijuana Rural Opportunity Initiative

03/31/2026 Striker Passed House Appropriations Committee (10-7-2)
To establish the Rural Opportunity Initiative (ROI), which authorizes the Arizona Department of Health Services to issue up to 18 marijuana establishment licenses and 18 corresponding nonprofit medical marijuana dispensary registration certificates to create new dual licensees in qualifying unserved rural communities — defined as cities, towns, or census-designated areas with populations under 50,000 that contain parcels located at least 25 miles from an existing marijuana retail location. Applications are accepted electronically April 1–14, 2027, reviewed in time-stamp order, and subject to a structured approval process requiring property ownership documentation, local zoning compliance, background attestations, and good standing with the Corporation Commission. ROI licensees must open within 18 months of license issuance, operate a minimum of 24 hours per week, and may only relocate to another qualifying unserved rural community that has not opted out. Cities, towns, and counties may opt out of the ROI by submitting certified resolutions to the Department at least one month before the application period opens. The legislation also expands existing marijuana establishment licensing rules, including 26 additional licenses under a Social Equity Ownership Program, and mandates that the Department adopt rules by January 1, 2025 to regulate marijuana delivery, with unauthorized delivery subject to a $20,000 civil penalty per violation enforceable by the Attorney General.
Original Sponsor- Gowan
Amendment Sponsor -Livingston
VPA. 3/4 voter requirement- YES
HOUSE – Appropriations – Strike Everything

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