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Maine Moves Medical Cannabis Test Debate to Next Legislative Sessions

Despite recent public health wins, Maine will delay action on requiring mandatory contaminant and potency testing for its medical cannabis program—continuing discussions into 2026.

Medical cannabis in Maine remains untested for mold, pesticides, heavy metals, and potency—unlike recreational products, which are held to mandatory testing standards. The Maine Public Health Association (MPHA), along with the Office of Cannabis Policy (OCP) and Maine CDC, continues to press for uniform safety protocols across both markets.⁽¹⁾

Two bipartisan bills—LD 104Rep. Marc Malon sponsors the bill LD 1847, sponsored by Rep. Anne Graham—seek to introduce mandatory testing, seed-to-sale tracking, potency caps on medical edibles, and public health funding using adult-use tax revenue.⁽²⁾

In 2023, a state audit found that nearly 42–45% of medical cannabis samples contained contaminants that would fail adult-use standards. This stark finding bolstered the call for reform.⁽²⁾

While many public health groups are in favor of the bill, caregivers and smaller-scale growers warn that it will cripple their business. They emphasize the need for modified testing protocols tailored to their scale, not wholesale application of adult-use standards.⁽³⁾

The two bills have been pushed to January 2026. Matthew Wellington, MPHA’s Associate Director, stated that MPHA hopes to leverage the interim time to bring public health and industry goals together. Caregiver industry representatives like Kristi Shaw acknowledged openness to testing but stressed workable compromise.⁽¹⁾

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