By Lisa Rough

To reschedule or not to reschedule? The DEA will decide by mid-2016. The Drug Enforcement Administration has promised to decide later this year whether to remove cannabis from the list of Schedule I controlled substances. The pledge comes in response to a letter sent last December by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and seven other politicians, including outspoken cannabis advocates Sens. Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). The lawmakers’ letter, addressed to leadership at the Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of National Drug Control, and the DEA, includes many common concerns regarding obstacles to medical cannabis research due to the substance’s current Schedule I classification. In their response, the agencies say they’ll provide a rescheduling recommendation and other requested information by mid-year. The agencies haven’t said which way they’re leaning, only that they may or may not reschedule. We’ll see.

Investors from Facebook and Reddit dive into the cannabis industry. Meadow, a San Francisco-based cannabis start-up, announced it has received $2.1 million from a notable group of investors, including Reddit CEO and Founder Steve Huffman, former Facebookers now at Slow Ventures, Joe Montana’s investment fund, Liquid 2 Ventures, and Twitch creator Justin Kan. Based in SoMa, Meadow focuses on powering online delivery services and dispatch for dispensaries, but it is likely they’ll be expanding to include other areas of the industry, including supply, medical marijuana clinics, and dispensary software. Meadow co-founder and CEO David Hua, said the company was “choosy” in its funding round, adding that he’s known Kan, of Twitch, for years. The two went to the same Burning Man group, Hua said. “He’s a brother from another mother.”

Prominent cannabis businessman denies he inspired a California bill that significantly helps him. Assemblymember Rob Bonta introduced Assembly Bill 2613 with three very specific criteria convicted drug felons must meet in order to qualify for a business license under new state regulations: the conviction must have occurred in another state, resulted in no jail time, and the felon must be approved by a local licensing body. All three apply to Steve DeAngelo, the outspoken cannabis supporter who operates the massive Harborside Health Center. DeAngelo, who also helped launch cannabis testing laboratory Steep Hill Labs, and investor consulting service the ArcView Group, is adamant that the bill wasn’t drafted as a favor to him, but a Northern California grower tells BuzzFeed otherwise: “It’s like a running joke in the industry at this point,” said Casey O’Neill of Happy Day Farms. “Steve got a bill written for himself.”

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To continue reading this story, visit our friend’s website (opens in a new window):: The Shake: DEA Promises Rescheduling Announcement, and Can Cannabis Dull Your Heart Attack?