USDA Database Describes Marijuana As ‘Medicinal’ Even As Federal Government Keeps It In Schedule I
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While the U.S. government still officially considers marijuana a Schedule I drug with no accepted medical use, federal agencies are increasingly breaking with that position. In one notable example, an entry in a Department of Agriculture (USDA) plant database describes the use of Cannabis sativa as having “medicinal” uses.
The entry appears in Dr. Duke’s Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases, a USDA guide that’s widely seen as a leading source of information on the relationship between people and plants. Developed by agency botanist James A. Duke, the database contains facts about chemical compounds produced by plants, biological activities they might affect and how they’ve been used by people historically.
USDA’s identification of cannabis as a “medicinal” plant seems to conflict with its federal Schedule I status, a category reserved for substances with “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.”
While the government has weighed moving marijuana to a lower schedule, the process has been stalled since the final days of the Biden administration, continuing into President Donald Trump’s time in office this term.
It’s far from unanimous within the government that cannabis is not medicine, however. In 2023, officials at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), as part of a rescheduling recommendation, determined that cannabis “has a currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States” and has a “potential for abuse less than the drugs or other substances in Schedules I and II.”
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) also acknowledges on its website “evidence that cannabis can be effective in treating some forms of pain” as well as “emerging evidence that it may have additional therapeutic uses.”
As for the USDA listing, it notes that THC—the chemical component of cannabis that puts it in Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act—is associated with a variety of therapeutic actions, showing potential to treat pain, convulsions, spasticy, glaucoma, eating disorders and more.
Reform advocates said the government’s broad position that cannabis isn’t medicine is increasingly untenable amid growing evidence of marijuana’s therapeutic potential.
“Scientific consensus has long challenged the federal government’s longstanding ‘Flat Earth’ position toward cannabis,” Paul Armentano, deputy director of the advocacy group NORML, told Marijuana Moment.
“As society’s understanding of cannabis’s therapeutic utility has evolved, along with its medicinal use and acceptance among patients and health-care professionals,” he added in response to a question about the new USDA listing, “it is growing impossible for federal agencies to deny the reality that cannabis is medicine—even if the federal government, or specifically Congress, has yet to formally adopt this position.”
At the group Marijuana Policy Project, meanwhile, Interim Executive Director Lauren Daly said that “the growing recognition of cannabis’s medical benefits is encouraging, yet it stands in stark contrast to the federal government’s outdated stance that cannabis has no accepted medical use.”
“This disparity isn’t just hypocritical; it highlights the urgent need for the rescheduling process to move forward,” she told Marijuana Moment in a statement. “Considering cannabis has been used as a medicine for thousands of years, it’s past time for federal policy to catch up.”
Kat Murti, executive director of Students for Sensible Drug Policy, told Marijuana Moment that the group is “glad to see the USDA coming to the same conclusion as the American Academy of Family Physicians, American Medical Student Association, American Osteopathic Association, American Preventive Medical Association, the National Academy of Sciences Institute Of Medicine (IOM), the National Association for Public Health Policy, and the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).”
“Marijuana is medicine. It is legally recommended for medical use to close to 5 million Americans by around 30,000 doctors in 38 states and the District of Columbia,” she said, pointing to comments SSDP filed in the ongoing rescheduling process. “Marijuana absolutely does not belong in Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act and it is a legal farce that flies in face of both scientific evidence and accepted practice that it has remained there for so long.”
Last week, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) again notified an agency judge that the marijuana rescheduling process remains stalled under the Trump administration.
It’s been six months since DEA Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) John Mulrooney temporarily paused hearings on a proposal to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) that was initiated under the Biden administration. And in a joint report to the judge submitted on Monday, DEA attorneys and rescheduling proponents said they’re still at an impasse.
“To date, Movants’ interlocutory appeal to the Acting Administrator regarding their Motion to Reconsider remains pending with the Acting Administrator. No briefing schedule has been set,” the notice says.
That came 90 days after both parties sent the judge an identical update, albeit when a different acting administrator was in charge.
DEA and the witnesses involved in the interlocutory appeal must provide another update in 90 days. But for the time being, any action on the proposed rule to reschedule marijuana is evidently contingent on DEA Acting Administrator Robert Murphy.
Murphy’s appointment as acting administrator wasn’t widely publicized, but he’s replaced Derek Maltz—who subscribes to the “gateway drug” theory for marijuana— in the role as the Senate considers confirming President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the agency, Terrance Cole.
In May, a Senate committee advanced the nomination of Cole to become DEA administrator amid the ongoing review of the marijuana rescheduling proposal that he has so far refused to commit to enacting.
Cole—who has previously voiced concerns about the dangers of marijuana and linked its use to higher suicide risk among youth—said in response to senators’ written questions that he would “give the matter careful consideration after consulting with appropriate personnel within the Drug Enforcement Administration, familiarizing myself with the current status of the regulatory process, and reviewing all relevant information.”
However, during an in-person hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in April, he said examining the rescheduling proposal will be “one of my first priorities” if he was confirmed for the role, saying it’s “time to move forward” on the stalled process—but again without clarifying what end result he would like to see.
Mulrooney, the agency judge, initially agreed to delay the proceedings after several pro-rescheduling parties requested a leave to file an interlocutory appeal amid allegations that certain DEA officials conspired with anti-rescheduling witnesses who were selected for the hearing.
The DEA judge initially agreed to delay the proceedings after several pro-rescheduling parties requested a leave to file an interlocutory appeal amid allegations that certain DEA officials conspired with anti-rescheduling witnesses who were selected for the hearing.
Originally, hearings were set to commence on January 21, but those were cancelled when Mulrooney granted the appeal motion. He ordered DEA and the witnesses to provide a joint status update within 90 days, which would be this coming Sunday.
The appeal came after the judge denied a motion that sought DEA’s removal from the rescheduling proceedings altogether, arguing that it is improperly designated as the chief “proponent” of the proposed rule given the allegations of ex parte communications with anti-rescheduling witnesses that “resulted in an irrevocable taint” to the process.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department told a federal court in January that it should pause a lawsuit challenging DEA’s marijuana rescheduling process after Mulrooney canceled the hearings.
Also in January, Mulrooney condemned DEA over its “unprecedented and astonishing” defiance of a key directive related to evidence it is seeking to use in the marijuana rescheduling proposal.
At issue was DEA’s insistence on digitally submitting tens of thousands of public comments it received in response to the proposed rule to move cannabis to Schedule III.
Mulrooney hasn’t been shy about calling out DEA over various procedural missteps throughout this rescheduling process.
For example, in December he criticized the agency for making a critical “blunder” in its effort to issue subpoenas to force Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials to testify in hearings—but he allowed the agency to fix the error and ultimately granted the request.
Relatedly, a federal judge also dismissed a lawsuit seeking to compel DEA to turn over its communications with an anti-cannabis organization.
Mulrooney had separately denied a cannabis research company’s request to allow it to add a young medical marijuana patient and advocate as a witness in the upcoming rescheduling hearing.
Also, one of the nation’s leading marijuana industry associations asked the judge to clarify whether it will be afforded the opportunity to cross-examine DEA during the upcoming hearings on the cannabis rescheduling proposal.
A coalition of health professionals that advocates for cannabis reform recently asked that the DEA judge halt future marijuana rescheduling hearings until a federal court is able to address a series of allegations they’re raising about the agency’s witness selection process.
The rescheduling proceedings have generated significant public interest. While moving marijuana to Schedule III wouldn’t federally legalize it, the reform would free up licensed cannabis businesses to take federal tax deductions and remove certain research barriers.
Meanwhile, two GOP senators introduced a bill in February that would continue to block marijuana businesses from taking federal tax deductions under Internal Revenue Service (IRS) code 280E—even if it’s ultimately rescheduled.
Beyond the hearing delays, another complicating factor is the change in leadership at DEA under the Trump administration.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was previously vocal about his support for legalizing cannabis, as well as psychedelics therapy. But during his Senate confirmation process in February, he said that he would defer to DEA on marijuana rescheduling in his new role.
Separately, former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) was reportedly photographed reviewing a document that appears to be a draft contract to provide services—including “administration-related guidance”—to a firm affiliated with the major marijuana company Trulieve. The visible portion of the document describes a lucrative bonus if a certain “matter resolves,” with an “additional ‘Super Success Fee’” for other “exclusive policy remedies.”
Late last month, the former congressman reiterated his own support for rescheduling cannabis—suggesting in an interview with a Florida Republican lawmaker that the GOP could win more of the youth vote by embracing marijuana reform.
Gaetz also said last month that Trump’s endorsement of a Schedule III reclassification was essentially an attempt to shore up support among young voters rather than a sincere reflection of his personal views about cannabis.
A survey conducted by a GOP pollster affiliated with Trump that was released in April found that a majority of Republicans back a variety of cannabis reforms, including rescheduling. And, notably, they’re even more supportive of allowing states to legalize marijuana without federal interference compared to the average voter.
Meanwhile, Trump picked former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi (R) to run DOJ, and the Senate confirmed that choice. During her confirmation hearings, Bondi declined to say how she planned to navigate key marijuana policy issues. And as state attorney general, she opposed efforts to legalize medical cannabis.
Amid the stalled marijuana rescheduling process that’s carried over from the last presidential administration, congressional researchers recently reiterated that lawmakers could enact the reform themselves with “greater speed and flexibility” if they so choose, while potentially avoiding judicial challenges.
Meanwhile, a newly formed coalition of professional athletes and entertainers, led by retired boxer Mike Tyson, sent a letter to Trump on Friday—thanking him for past clemency actions while emphasizing the opportunity he has to best former President Joe Biden by rescheduling marijuana, expanding pardons and freeing up banking services for licensed cannabis businesses.
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