Share: 

Bill to limit marijuana restrictions passes General Assembly

Legislators approve law to override county’s zoning decisions
June 29, 2025

A bill limiting the restrictions a county can place on the marijuana industry has passed the General Assembly and awaits the signature of Gov. Matt Meyer. 

The House voted 25-13 June 25 to pass Senate Bill 75, which had already received a stamp of approval in the Senate in April. 

Sponsored by Sen. Trey Paradee, D-Dover, the bill limits the zoning and operation restrictions a county can place on retail marijuana operations, superseding county jurisdiction.

“When we passed legislation legalizing adult-use cannabis in 2023, we intended to create a tightly regulated, but accessible market that balanced public health, safety and business opportunity,” said House Majority Whip Ed Osienski, D-Newark. “Unfortunately, our counties have imposed zoning restrictions so severe that they undermine the law’s intent and effectively ban legal cannabis operations completely.”

Under the bill, restrictions would prohibit retail marijuana stores from operating within a half-mile of each other, and within 500 feet of a school, licensed child care, residential treatment facility, park or library, or place of worship outside a commercial or industrial zone.

“SB 75 addresses [zoning restrictions] by setting reasonable limits on county regulations, while still giving them the ability to protect sensitive areas like schools, daycares and places of worship,” Osienski said. “I want to be clear that this bill will not cause communities to be flooded with cannabis shops – there are only 30 retail licenses total. To put that in perspective, we have more than 300 liquor stores across the state.”

Under the original legislation passed in 2023, municipalities had the option to prohibit marijuana-related industries within their corporate limits. Most towns and cities took the state up on that option. 

However, with no option to ban marijuana activity in county jurisdiction, Sussex council passed a very restrictive ordinance that effectively makes it impossible to conduct any marijuana operation in Sussex County. 

Under the county’s ordinance, cultivation and manufacturing facilities are a permitted use in AR-1, C-1, CR-2, C-3, LI and LI-2, which does not require a public hearing.

Retail stores are only permitted in C-3 zoning districts and require a conditional-use application filed with the county, which is subject to planning & zoning and county council public hearings.

No retail store is permitted within three miles of a town or city boundary, within three miles of another marijuana retail store or within three miles of a church, school, college or substance-abuse treatment facility.

“The entrepreneurs who have secured retail licenses have already cleared a long list of hurdles and waited patiently to open their doors,” Osienski said. “They’re ready to serve customers safely and responsibly, and SB 75 will give them that opportunity while still respecting local concerns.”

Rep. Valerie Jones Giltner, R-Georgetown, criticized supporters of the bill for stripping county officials of the ability to properly zone the area. 

At this point, you’re asking that we override what I elected John Rieley and the rest of the county council to do to protect and take care of me as a resident and to look at my property in a holistic fashion when they’re making zoning decisions,” she said on the House floor. “We must ask why the state originally deferred zoning decisions to the county, and it was for this very reason, because [county officials] know the demographics, the geography and they also do the comprehensive planning for the county. And yet we think we know better, and we’re going to override what we elected those officials to do.”