Mayor proposes ban on ‘gas station drugs’ sold at shops

By Nick Sloan

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    KANSAS CITY, Missouri (KMBC) — Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas is pushing for a citywide crackdown on the unregulated “gas station drugs” sold at convenience stores and vape shops.

Lucas this week introduced an ordinance which would prohibit the sale of products such as kratom, Delta-8 and Delta-9 THC edibles, synthetic cannabinoids, and nitrous oxide canisters that are currently legal to sell but not overseen by federal health regulators.

“Unregulated gas station drugs are substances that are sold with virtually no oversight or accountability,” Lucas said. “The products are marketed as legal alternatives but often just as dangerous as controlled substances and have no place on our shelves when they contribute to addiction, overdoses, and neighborhood instability, particularly impacting our children.”

City officials say the Kansas City Health Department recently investigated a deadly overdose in which kratom was found in the victim’s system.

Kratom, along with hemp-derived THC products like Delta-8 and Delta-9, has not been approved for any medical use by the Food and Drug Administration.

Public Safety Director Lace Cline said the products are often linked not only to health harms but also disorder around the businesses that sell them.

Violations could lead to fines of $750 to $1,000 per day and could cost business owners their licenses.

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