A day before recreational marijuana became legal in Ohio, Hamilton city council , unanimously deciding to ban those sales within its city limits for at least six months.
The southwestern Ohio city isn鈥檛 alone.
In the days and months following the passage of Issue 2, local governments have taken similar votes in suburban and rural communities all over the state, from to , to .
The details differ depending on the place 鈥 sometimes the prohibitions are for several months, others have no prescribed end date. Some places already allow medical marijuana sales, others have banned that too. Some seem open to the idea of eventually allowing for recreational sales, others less so.
But regardless, the bans address many of the same concerns and anxieties.
Why so many local bans?
Barbara Wilson is a spokesperson for West Chester Township, a suburb north of Cincinnati which passed a 360 day moratorium on recreational weed sales in December.
鈥淭here is a pattern of communities opting out at the beginning because it's uncertain and they don't know what to expect."Jason Erkes, Cresco Labs
She said the temporary moratorium is needed to give the city time to better understand the current law and to adjust its zoning regulations accordingly.
鈥淭hrowing the door open to the establishment of these commercial operations: does that mean we have cannabis sales on every corner?鈥 Wilson asked. 鈥淒oes that mean every convenience store can sell cannabis? If you just allow it to happen with no rules or regulations, you can't go back and change it later.鈥
City officials across the state echoed her sentiment.
鈥淭here are so many things that are still up in the air to be resolved,鈥 said councilmember Gwen Brill of Fairfield at . 鈥淚 want to be certain what the citizens really want in the city. Do you really want a dispensary here?鈥
In other communities, like Ashland, the moratoriums are an extension of local legislation that already bans medical marijuana dispensaries.
鈥淭his legislation would once again reaffirm that we would not allow the commercial growth or dispensing or dispensaries within the city of Ashland,鈥 said the city鈥檚 mayor, Matt Miller, at a January city council meeting.
Many city officials also say they鈥檙e waiting for more guidance from the state.
In December, the Ohio Senate that would make substantial changes to the current law, including raising the marijuana tax rate. But months later, that legislation remains stalled in the Ohio House.
Federal, state and local laws 鈥 who gets the final say?
Marijuana remains federally illegal.
However, the federal government has on state and local officers to enforce their own drug laws. If those laws change, the federal government can鈥檛 force local police to prioritize federal law over state law.
So, as more states decriminalize and legalize weed, marijuana-related arrests have dropped. In 2022, the FBI reported police arrested about for marijuana offenses. That鈥檚 down from about arrests in 2007.
Ohio has now joined the ranks of states that have legalized recreational pot, but the statewide law has some local limitations.

鈥淸Municipalities] don't have the authority through Issue 2 to usurp the ability of individuals to possess or consume or grow marijuana,鈥 said Kent Scarrett, executive director of the Ohio Municipal League. 鈥淏ut they can regulate the business side of it.鈥
Scarrett said the Ohio constitution guarantees cities and townships the right to home rule, and that applies to marijuana sales.
鈥淕enerally, the philosophy is, a better government works the best when people are closest to it,鈥 Scarrett said. 鈥淎nd that is best reflected in local government because they have direct influence on how their communities work.鈥
Still, some of the communities banning recreational weed sales are located in
Ohio dispensaries forge ahead, expect sales to rise
Regardless of local bans, Ohio dispensaries are preparing for .
鈥淭here is a pattern of communities opting out at the beginning just because it's uncertain and they don't know what to expect,鈥 said Jason Erkes, the chief communications officer for Cresco Labs, which operates over 70 dispensaries across eight states, including a handful in Ohio, plus a grow facility in Yellow Springs.
He鈥檚 confident some of those communities will come around.
鈥淲hen they see that there is no change whatsoever, and the community right next door that embraced it has all this tax revenue coming in and they're able to buy new computers, new fire trucks, put in new parks and playgrounds, they're like, 鈥楬ey, wait a minute, we want some of that tax revenue, too.鈥 And they're quickly changing their minds,鈥 Erkes said.
So Cresco Labs is amping up production and preparing to open new locations across the state.
鈥淲hat we've seen around the country, as states have gone through this medical to recreational conversion process, is a mass influx of people,鈥 he said, 鈥渉undreds and hundreds of people wanting to take advantage of this new, open marketplace for cannabis.鈥
Still, it鈥檒l be until you can buy that weed for fun anywhere in Ohio, regardless of whether your local community has a ban in place. Unless lawmakers act, the Division of Cannabis Control doesn鈥檛 plan to begin issuing permits for recreational marijuana sales til September.