The Crackdown on CBD Edibles Has Begun

CBD, one of the buzziest wellness products of 2019, just hit a snag. New York City has forbidden the sale of CBD edibles in restaurants, bars, and other establishments that fall under the Department of Health's purview, Eater reported Tuesday. Health inspectors in the city are already visiting restaurants to enforce the crackdown. Despite its overwhelming trendiness, there's not much we know for sure about CBD, or cannabidiol, a chemical compound found in the cannabis plant that has no psychoactive properties. Many CBD users say it helps relieve stress and anxiety, muscle soreness, insomnia, and more, but there is very little scientific proof to support or counter these claims. CBD is a try-for-yourself kind of compound. If only it were that easy. Trying CBD for yourself gets tricky when it comes to legality. You see, CBD is still considered a controlled substance if it comes from the marijuana variety of cannabis plant, because the marijuana has THC. But it is fully legal if it is derived from the hemp variety of cannabis plant, which has very little THC. (CBD from hemp was considered a controlled substance until the very recently passed 2018 Farm Bill reclassified hemp as an agricultural product.) However, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration still holds that it is illegal to sell CBD in dietary supplements or in food through interstate commerce—again, because we really just don't know enough about it.