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Now that ballots have been tallied across the state on Issue 2, some Ohio lawmakers are beginning to talk about could-be tweaks to the statute legalizing adult-use recreational marijuana.
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While the constitutional amendment on reproductive rights on this week’s ballot in Ohio is getting most of the attention and money, the second question - whether the state should legalize recreational marijuana - is a big one too.
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Prosecuting attorneys cite many reasons to reject Issue 2, which would legalize marijuana use to Ohioans over 21 - but supporters of the plan call the prosecutor's concerns "scare tactics."
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Supporters of Issue 2 are airing a new ad that says Ohio is losing tax revenues to Michigan because so many Buckeyes go to the state up north to buy marijuana.
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The state’s warning comes less than three weeks from when Ohioans will decide whether to legalize adult-use of recreational marijuana, including THC through cartridges.
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The study estimated the tax income based on comparisons with Colorado, Nevada, Michigan, Illinois, Washington and Oregon where adult marijuana use is legal.
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The language veers from that used in the original proposed amendment that could enshrine abortion into Ohio's constitution.
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The Ohio Ballot Board will meet Thursday to determine language voters will see on the ballot for two issues: one to enshrine abortion rights into the constitution, and the other to pass a law to legalize marijuana.
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Gov. Mike DeWine is against the proposed marijuana legalization statute, but opponents say his arguments don't reflect current studies.
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Political scientists weigh in on how having abortion rights and legal marijuana on the same statewide Ohio ballot this November might affect the outcome of both issues.