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Report inaccurate information, suggest improvements, or ask questions about cannabis in the Phoenix metropolitan area.

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ValleyCannabis.org is an educational resource, not a cannabis business. We don’t sell products, provide legal advice, or operate dispensaries. We welcome your feedback to help keep this site accurate and useful for residents, snowbirds, students, patients, and visitors.

Report Inaccurate Information

Phoenix-metro cannabis policy evolves constantly — ADHS rulemaking, city-council ordinance amendments, county-attorney policy changes, MCSO operational guidance, tribal-law updates. If you notice information on this site that is outdated or incorrect, please reach out and let us know. Include the page URL and the specific information that needs correction so we can update it promptly.

Suggest Improvements

Is there a Valley city, neighborhood, dispensary, or topic we haven’t covered well enough? A new state law or ADHS rule we should reflect? A federal-contractor or tribal-law nuance we should add? We’d love to hear your suggestions for making ValleyCannabis.org more useful.

About Our Team

ValleyCannabis.org is maintained by a small team of researchers and writers committed to providing free, accurate cannabis information. We are not affiliated with any dispensary, producer, MSO, advocacy organization, law firm, or political campaign. Our only goal is to make Phoenix-metro cannabis law and resources accessible.


For Legal Advice

This site does not provide legal advice. For arrest situations, employment matters, university student-conduct proceedings, or AMMA-card disputes, consult an Arizona-licensed attorney. The State Bar of Arizona maintains a Lawyer Referral Service. The Arizona Cannabis Bar Association includes notable practitioners like Tom Dean (criminal defense, Phoenix), Jon Udell (regulatory and policy), the Rose Law Group (Scottsdale), and Saul Ewing (corporate cannabis).

For Medical Questions

This site does not provide medical advice. For cannabis-therapeutic questions, consult an Arizona-licensed physician familiar with cannabinoid pharmacology. AMMA-recommending physicians are widely available; many Valley dispensaries advertise affiliated telehealth physicians.

For University Conduct Questions

ASU, the Maricopa Community Colleges, the University of Arizona, and Northern Arizona University each have their own DFSCA-compliant cannabis policies and student-conduct processes. Each university’s Office of Student Conduct or Office of the Dean of Students is the appropriate first point of contact for student-conduct questions. Students facing serious sanctions should consult the university’s student-advocate office and an Arizona-licensed attorney.

For Federal-Workplace Questions

If you work for a federal contractor (Honeywell, Boeing Mesa, Lockheed Martin at Luke, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Microchip’s defense work, Intel under CHIPS Act), a DOT-regulated employer, the Department of Defense, or any other federally-tested position, the Arizona AMMA medical-cannabis card does not protect you. Consult an employment attorney before any cannabis-related decision.

For Tribal-Land Questions

The Inter Tribal Council of Arizona (Phoenix office, 2214 N. Central Ave.) can provide referrals for tribal-court attorneys. Each of the five Phoenix-area tribal nations has its own legal framework; the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, Gila River Indian Community, Ak-Chin Indian Community, Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation, and Tohono O’odham Nation each have separate sovereign legal systems.

For Official Inquiries

For questions about Arizona or Phoenix-metro cannabis law, licensing, or regulations, please contact the appropriate agency directly:

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