Legal & Regulatory

Cannabis legalization in Argentina’s Santa Fe could soon become a reality

While many Argentine provinces struggle with their laws against cannabis that slowdown their projects, Santa Fe is taking steps towards cannabis legalization. This initiative comes at the right moment as cannabis acceptance is higher than ever, due to many people realizing the plant’s medical properties and various application to treat illness with more success than conventional medicine.

The bill to support the cultivation of cannabis for therapeutic purposes in Santa Fe, Argentina is advancing in the Legislature. One of the promoters is Agustina Donnet, provincial deputy for Equality and Participation. The initiative was presented by the political space in 2019 and authorizes the cultivation and possession of cannabis and its derivatives to people who need it for medical reasons.

The project is on the to-do list in the provincial Chamber of Deputies and expectations are placed on the approval of the regulations: “We are very much looking forward to this project, which has been taken up again and we have been able to start working with the Health Commission in coordination with other political spaces,” said Agustina Donnet.

If you want to know more about cannabis, how the province of Santa Fe is looking to legalize cannabis in the coming weeks, and to find out the latest hemp news, download the Hemp.im mobile application.

A law that would legalize the use of cannabis in Santa Fe

Composed of five articles, the bill defines the provincial government as being responsible for ensuring and controlling the supply of cannabis to users.

In the next session, could be obtained the average sanction of the project that comes to give an answer to a reality that cannot be denied and has been discussed in these last years “We are happy to be able to be winning one more right for all those mothers whose children need medical cannabis and who need the help of the state because it is a problem of public health,” explained the deputy.

The objective of this bill is to be able to issue an authorization from the provincial state so that self-cultivation for medicinal purposes is possible in the province. Under that premise, the Health Commission of the Lower House of Parliament ruled this year on the project in question. If the initiative is approved, anyone who needs to grow crops for medicinal purposes would only have to approach the Ministry of Health and with a medical order apply for a permit.

It also designates the provincial Ministry of Health with the tasks of advising and divulging the scope of the law, and empowers it to promote scientific research agreements on cannabinoid derivatives (both in universities and public laboratories).

Donnet and Giustiniani celebrate the work done by the province’s cannabis organizations. On the eve of a new legislative session, Equality joins the call for urgent sanction of the provincial law on self-cultivation of cannabis for therapeutic use.

Multiple cannabis projects are being developed all around Argentina

The Cordoba town of Villa Ciudad Parque will allow private companies to grow cannabis for medicinal purposes. This is a measure with which the municipality seeks to provide a solution to a public health problem, encourage political debate on the issue, and diversify local economic activity, which has been hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

The municipality will promote and develop community-based cultivation of cannabis for medicinal, therapeutic and scientific research purposes and will grant permits to laboratories, which must first be authorized by the Anmat, according to an ordinance published this afternoon.

This makes it a pioneering case, since in the few previous experiences in the country the local states kept the possibility of cultivation to themselves.

The authorities in the town of Cordoba recalled that there are two or three previous experiences, such as that of the Government of Jujuy, which was given a permit for the State to develop cannabis crops for medicinal purposes.

There is also a similar precedent in the Buenos Aires municipality of Hurlingham, which in 2019 passed an ordinance to allow the cultivation of cannabis for research and therapeutic purposes. However, in this case, the municipality reserved for itself the possibility of doing so.

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(Featured image by Aphiwat chuangchoem via Pexels)

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First published in Aire de Santa Fe, a third-party contributor translated and adapted the article from the original. In case of discrepancy, the original will prevail.

Although we made reasonable efforts to provide accurate translations, some parts may be incorrect. Hemp.im assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions or ambiguities in the translations provided on this website. Any person or entity relying on translated content does so at their own risk. Hemp.im is not responsible for losses caused by such reliance on the accuracy or reliability of translated information. If you wish to report an error or inaccuracy in the translation, we encourage you to contact us.

Arturo Garcia

Arturo Garcia started out as a political writer for a local newspaper in Peru, before covering big-league sports for national broadsheets. Eventually he began writing about innovative tech and business trends, which let him travel all over North and South America. Currently he is exploring the world of Bitcoin and cannabis, two hot commodities which he believes are poised to change history.

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