Maryland’s cannabis regulator recalls bacteria-contaminated food

Maryland’s marijuana regulator released a recall Tuesday of food sold by Vireo Health at retailers across the state, and later tests were found to be contaminated by bacteria.
According to a notice issued on Tuesday by the agency, several batches of Max chocolate milk were sold across the state from July to September, without testing the total huge coliform population, which could indicate unsanitary conditions during processing or processing, according to a notice issued on Tuesday.
MCA recalls HI Color Max chocolate milk for sale in several pharmacies across the state:
- Green stores run by Vireo in Baltimore, Rockville and Frederick.
- Edgewater’s mana.
- Summit Health Cannabis Dispensary in Carsonville.
- KIP Pharmacy in Cockeysville.
- Salisbury pharmacy.
- Green Dot Pharmacy in Laurel, Linthicum and Millersville.
- Caroline Pharma.
MCA’s consultants urge consumers to check the “production lot number” to determine if the purchased product is affected by the recall.
The MCA’s consulting firm said the batch number “associated with the product name or individual package number… can be found in the name of the pharmacy where the product is sold.”
According to the MCA, the products were sold between July 5 and September 16.
Officials said anyone who believes they have purchased the affected product should immediately stop using it, return the product to the purchased retailer and report any adverse reactions to the regulator.
According to analysis mjbizdaily It was conducted last year.
Maryland launched MMJ sales in 2013. Adult use sales begin in 2023, according to MJBIZ FACTBOOK projection. Consolidated sales in 2025 may reach US$1.2 billion.



