Navigating California’s Three Cannabis Regulatory Bodies
Due to COVID-10, the long-awaited consolidation is on the back burner.
The state of California has three regulatory bodies that govern cannabis law: the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA), the California Department of Health-Manufactured Cannabis Safety Branch (CDPH), and the Bureau of Cannabis Control (BCC). Simply put, the CDFA oversees cultivators, the CDPH sets the requirements for manufacturers, and the BCC regulates licenses for retailers, distributors, labs and events.
The three-part system has proven to be such a bottleneck that California Governor Gavin Newsom pledged to merge all three branches into one single entity—the Department of Cannabis Control—sometime this year, but the impact of COVID-19 has put that plan on the backburner until at least 2021.
In the meantime, growers and sellers need to make do with the system we’ve got, which means getting intimately familiar with what you can and can’t do in the cannabis business. For a thorough dive into each department, and a list of potential pitfalls to watch out for, check out this thorough article here.
Why Other States Will Follow California’s Lead on 100% Clean Energy by Mid Century
The nation, and the world, views the Golden State as the environmental frontrunner.
A New Ultra-Luxe Coffee Table Book Explores the Science of Growing Cannabis
Writing the book on cultivation.
A New Docuseries Uncovers SoCal’s Pioneering Role in the Nation’s Aerospace Industry
The series coincides with the 50th anniversary of the historic moon landing.



