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Tag: Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed the Cannabis Regulation Act.

The History of Cannabis in New Mexico

New Mexico’s cannabis history is a story of changing laws, patient advocacy, and a gradual shift from prohibition to regulation. For much of the 20th century, cannabis was treated as an illegal substance under state and federal law, but New Mexico later became one of the first states to recognize its medical potential and eventually legalized adult use.

In the early decades of prohibition, New Mexico followed the national trend toward criminalization. Cannabis possession and sale were increasingly policed, and by the mid-20th century the plant had been pushed out of ordinary medical and agricultural use. Like the rest of the country, New Mexico entered the modern era with cannabis defined more by enforcement than by medicine or commerce.

A major turning point came in 1978, when the state passed the Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act. That law created an early state-level medical cannabis research program and signaled that New Mexico was willing to consider cannabis as a legitimate therapeutic option. Although the program was limited and reached only a small number of patients, it laid important groundwork for later reform.

The next major milestone arrived in 2007, when Governor Bill Richardson signed the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act. This law established New Mexico’s modern medical cannabis program and allowed qualified patients with serious medical conditions to obtain cannabis through a regulated system. Over time, the program expanded as more conditions were added and more patients enrolled, making medical cannabis a lasting part of the state’s healthcare landscape.

Local governments also began to soften penalties before statewide reform took hold. Santa Fe decriminalized possession of small amounts of cannabis in 2014, and Albuquerque followed with similar changes in 2018. In 2019, New Mexico lawmakers approved statewide decriminalization of small amounts, reducing the consequences for simple possession and reflecting a broader change in public opinion across the state.

The biggest change came in 2021, when Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed the Cannabis Regulation Act. The law legalized adult-use cannabis for people 21 and older, allowed limited home cultivation, and created a regulated commercial market. Legal sales began on April 1, 2022, marking the start of New Mexico’s recreational cannabis era and transforming the state’s relationship with the plant.

Since legalization, New Mexico has built a growing cannabis industry with cultivators, manufacturers, testing laboratories, and dispensaries operating across the state. The market has created jobs, generated tax revenue, and given rise to a distinctly New Mexican cannabis culture shaped by local businesses, small producers, and patient access. At the same time, federal prohibition continues to create challenges for banking, transportation, and enforcement, especially near the state’s borders.

Today, New Mexico’s cannabis history is still being written. The state moved from prohibition to medical access, then to decriminalization and adult-use legalization in just a few decades. That progression reflects the efforts of patients, lawmakers, advocates, and entrepreneurs who helped reshape cannabis policy in New Mexico and turned the state into a leader in modern reform.

Shane Stanford
NM Bearded Man

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