Under Oregon's Proposed Rules, Legal Psilocybin Will Be All-Natural, Organic, and GMO-Free
The state's regulators plan to start accepting applications from manufacturers and "service centers" on January 2.

The 2020 ballot initiative that made Oregon the first state to legalize psilocybin use instructed the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) to complete the regulations necessary to implement that policy within two years. The OHA, which plans to begin accepting applications from psilocybin manufacturers and "service centers" on January 2, is on track to comply with that requirement. Its proposed regulations should interest psychedelic fans and drug policy reformers, since they represent a groundbreaking effort to establish rules for producing, distributing, and consuming the main active ingredient in "magic mushrooms," which the federal government has banned since 1968.
Measure 109, a.k.a. the Oregon Psilocybin Services Act, envisions businesses where adults 21 or older can legally take the drug under the supervision of a "facilitator" after completing a "preparation session." It says the "clients" of those "psilocybin service centers" need not have a specific medical or psychiatric diagnosis, leaving the door open for anyone interested in the experience for psychological, spiritual, intellectual, or recreational reasons.
That is a striking departure from the approach taken by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which has deemed psilocybin a "breakthrough therapy" for treatment-resistant depression and may eventually approve it for that purpose. Even when psilocybin is available as a prescription drug, its legal use will be limited to patients who qualify for that diagnosis or another medical or quasi-medical label.
Oregon's proposed regulations, which are open to public comment until April 22, also differ from the FDA model in prohibiting synthetic psilocybin, specifying that the drug must be derived not only from fungi but from a single species: Psilocybe cubensis, which is one of hundreds that contain psilocybin. The rules also restrict growing media (prohibiting manure and wood chips because of concerns about microbial contamination); the solvents that can be used for extraction (allowing only water, vegetable glycerin, acetic acids, ethanol, and methanol); the forms in which extracts can be sold (banning those that "appeal to minors," such as "products in the shape of an animal, vehicle, person or character"); and the way in which those extracts may be consumed (specifying that they "must be consumed orally").
That last requirement, which explicitly rules out "transdermal patches, inhalers, nasal sprays, suppositories and injections," could prove problematic. "Studies have shown that psilocybin therapy is effective in relieving emotional and existential distress at the end of life for 65-85% of terminally ill people in clinical trials, when administered properly," Harris Bricken managing partner Vince Sliwoski notes on the firm's Psychedelics Law Blog. "Many terminal patients cannot swallow….If OHA sticks to this 'oral only' stricture in the final rules—based on a restrictive reading of Measure 109 or for any other reason—you can expect some controversy and perhaps even legislative intervention."
The OHA's proposed regulations include some other weird or questionable elements. They say "manufacturers are prohibited from applying pesticides to fungi or growing medium," for instance, while also requiring rejection of any extract batch when testing "detects the presence of a pesticide above action levels in any sample." If it is possible to use pesticides but still comply with the latter rule, you might wonder, why is an outright ban necessary? Manufacturers also would be prohibited from "producing psilocybin by using genetically modified organisms such as bacteria," a rule that seems even more dubious.
Measure 109 charges the OHA with setting training requirements for facilitators, including coverage of "social and cultural considerations." The authority arguably went overboard with that mission.
The OHA plans to require that trip sitters complete a 120-hour, nine-module curriculum administered by licensed trainers, including 12 hours on "Cultural Equity in relation to Psilocybin Services." Under that heading are topics such as "cultural equity, its relationship to health equity and social determinants of health"; "racial justice, including the impact of race and privilege on health outcomes and the impact of systemic racism on individuals and communities"; "the impact of drug policy on individuals and communities"; and the "history of systemic inequity, including systemic inequity in delivery of healthcare, mental health and behavioral health services."
However one might quibble with the details of the OHA regulations, Measure 109 is creating an option that did not previously exist: Service center customers will be able to legally consume psilocybin of known provenance and dose, produced in sanitary conditions subject to rules that provide assurances of quality and safety that are generally hard to come by in the black market. And psychedelic users who rebel at the OHA's requirements can still resort to self-help. Oregon voters made that option less legally perilous on the same day they passed Measure 109, when they also approved a trailblazing ballot measure that eliminated criminal penalties for drug use.
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It's obvious why all the peculiar requirements -- legislators and regulators want to show how important they are, how normal life is impossible without their coercive guidance.
Hollywood is partly to blame, in that business people are always shown barking orders with no thinking required. Looks so easy, and they are so powerful! "Why can't I be like that?", they think, then "I must be like that!" follows directly.
Hollywood spends 100% of its time living in a fantasy land. They are the least likely industry to be reality based. Hell, they can't even make movies about Hollywood that are accurate, so of course they are clueless about businesses.
Hollywood shows business people mostly as being evil.
You're missing the big picture, saved till last. "trip sitters complete a 120-hour, nine-module curriculum administered by licensed trainers, including 12 hours on "Cultural Equity in relation to Psilocybin Services.""
So now we have government employees who are hired to watch people get stoned. Now of course taking psychedelics under the watchful eye and control of a government operative who is properly trained in wokeness... not much could go wrong there.
You mean "walking and talking" isn't a thing?
Best illustrated in Brazil: "Yes. Yes. No, no, no. Approved. Cancel that. Yes." And then you get to his office, which is supplied with a stack of papers and a bob that falls on a knife edge to land on "yes" or "no". After all, he'd been told what an important job he'd have, where he'd be making decisions."
Yo! Like totally trippin dude...
With a "facilitator" wielding a clipboard.
Well that takes all of the fun out of it.
Typical progressive solution. Even when they get rid of a silly drug law they still have to impose inane regulations on top. Because the idea that individuals can best make decisions for themselves is beyond their comprehension.
This is why there is still a thriving black market in marijuana in California. It wasn't good enough just to legalize it, they had to regulate and tax the hell out of it as well.
This isn't about freedom for the individual, it's still all about social control by the elites.
Like masks and vaccinations?
Like having to subscribe to "The Big Lie" (about stolen elections of course) before you can run on the Rethugglican ticket?
But in this case, the elites are hippies: no pesticides, GMO, or synthetics, just 'shrooms.
What if you want genetically modified? What if non-organic would be cheaper?
Asking for a friend.
You can’t make that decision.
I want them to grow in the shape of Mike Tyson's ear.
since they represent a groundbreaking effort to establish rules for producing, distributing, and consuming the main active ingredient in "magic mushrooms," which the federal government has banned since 1968.
Given the history of states that established... rules for distributing and consuming a substance which the federal government has banned, I'm excited to know just how badly Oregon can fuck this up.
So badly. Worse than you can even imagine.
Wait, using mushrooms is both part of the traditional Norwegian and Saamish cultures, but part of that is to gather them yourself and prepare them yourself. It's obvious Oregon isn't recognizing the equity of my Saamish heritage and the systemic racism my Saamish ancestors experienced in Scandinavia with these rules (and while this is meant as sarcasm it also is true). Can I ignore the rules, or are the Saami to white to get consideration under the equity umbrella?
On a serious note, I hope the FDA does approve their use, and the DoD and DVA follows suit, because they've, plus other psychedelics have shown great promise in treating PTSD, TBI and phantom pain in amputees, and we are losing to many veterans to suicide, and neither the DoD or the DVA seem to have a real plan to address it. But you can get a grant to address suicide prevention from the VA, all you have to do is hand out gun locks. Because that will surely work. Don't you dare try to use marijuana or psychedelics though.
One of the things the Vikings series actually got right (it was pretty hit and miss on its accuracy) was the use of psychedelic mushrooms in old Norse culture. One theory goes so far as to propose that the description of Berserkers could come from Vikings who were stoned out of their gourds in battle. It's also been proposed that the blue war paint of the Celts was mixed with psychedelics. The descriptions used by the chronicles of the time for both warriors give clues that could be symptoms of psychedelic use, e.g. little to no bleeding when cut, many psychedelics cause peripheral vasoconstriction. The Romans noted that Celtic warriors often fought with abandonment and didn't bleed until after the battle ended, from deep cuts. The Anglo-Saxon chroniclers noted the same thing about some Viking warriors. Both sets of chroniclers also noted that some warriors fought nude and seemed immune to the climate during battle. Also, some noted that these warriors often vomited after battle and were extremely fatigued.
According to the article, if you do it yourself, it's not illegal, or at least not a crime.
Mandated DEI “training”?
Man that’s fucking stupid for about 1,000 reasons.
Way to completely ruin sensible decriminalization, Oregon.
Did you expect anything different? At this point both Oregon and Washington are trying to out-California, California. It really is a game of hold my beer between the three left coast state governments.
"Oral" would include sublingual.
Can we just go with "safe and effective" and leave it at that?
Then all we need to do is include "getting high" as an acceptable thing to be effective at.
It would change everything. "Physically addicting" would come under the heading of safety. So we could work on heroin derivatives and analogs that are not addicting. "Easy to overdose and die" would come under the heading of safe... and we could work on that.
It sure seems like everything would work out better if Seagrams and Bayer could devote some research into making cocaine energy drinks and short lived THC derivatives for controlled highs that wear off in 15 minutes.
It had better be gluten free and Kosher or I ain't buying any of it.
Free the glutens!
Super strange that they exclusively chose a tropical species, when there are common and equally safe varieties that grow natively in Oregon.
I suppose so they can still choose to arrest anyone who happens to accidentally have them growing in their yard.