Our position on reform

Real reform means
access, accountability,
and dignity.

Policy should protect people, not shut them out. We fight for disability rights, transparency, and equity — across every system, every sector, every barrier.

Read our statement
We reject the model that leaves people with disabilities behind.

Bigger than one industry. Built for everyone.

At Marijuana Advocacy Group Inc., we believe policy should protect people, not shut them out. Too often, laws, regulations, and agency practices are written in ways that leave people with disabilities behind — especially those who are poor, misunderstood, underrepresented, or trying to build something for themselves.

We support policy reform that expands access, strengthens civil rights protections, improves transparency, and forces public systems to do what they claim to do. Reform is not just about rewriting rules on paper.

It is about making sure people can actually work, participate, advocate, learn, and live with dignity in the real world.

Our work began with the fight for fair access to the cannabis sector, but our mission has always been bigger than one industry. We advocate for people with disabilities across systems, across sectors, and across barriers.

"Reform is not just about rewriting rules on paper. It is about making sure people can actually work, participate, advocate, learn, and live with dignity."
— Marijuana Advocacy Group Inc.

Five principles we won't compromise on.

01

People with disabilities deserve equal access to opportunity — not endless gatekeeping dressed up as procedure.

02

Public agencies should be held to the laws they enforce and the promises they make.

03

Programs designed to help people should not be weaponized to delay, deny, or discourage them.

04

Policy should reflect reality — not stigma, outdated assumptions, or bureaucratic convenience.

05

If a decision affects someone's life, livelihood, education, or independence — that person deserves a clear explanation and a fair process.

Six fronts where we push for change.

i.
Disability Rights Enforcement

Stronger enforcement of the ADA, Section 504, workplace accommodation protections, and anti-retaliation laws. Rights that exist only on paper are not enough — enforcement must be real, accessible, and consistent.

ii.
Fair Access to Work & Self-Employment

People with disabilities should be able to pursue meaningful employment, entrepreneurship, and self-directed career paths without being pushed into narrow boxes. We support reforms that expand vocational freedom.

iii.
Government Transparency & Accountability

Agencies, institutions, and publicly funded systems must be accountable for their actions. Stronger records access, clearer decision-making, better complaint systems, and real consequences when agencies ignore due process.

iv.
Inclusive Education & Public Information

Too many people are denied opportunity simply because they were never given clear information about their rights. We support reform that improves public education around disability law, accommodations, and accessible complaint pathways.

v.
Equity in Emerging Industries

New industries should not repeat old exclusion. We support policies that ensure people with disabilities are not shut out of emerging economic opportunities — including the cannabis sector — because of stigma or inaccessible systems.

vi.
Practical Accessibility

Accessibility cannot be treated like a side note or a public relations line. We support practical reforms that improve communication access, digital accessibility, workplace inclusion, transportation access, and public participation.

Plain. Enforceable. Measurable.

Real reform is not about polished language. It is about outcomes people can actually see and rely on.

Anything less is often just polished language covering the same broken behavior.
Clear rights
Clear standards
Clear complaint processes
Clear timelines
Clear accountability

Policy failure is not abstract.
It is personal.

When policy fails, people lose jobs, income, education, housing stability, health, confidence, and time they never get back. They are forced to fight systems that were supposed to help them. They are ignored, talked down to, buried in paperwork, and treated like a problem for asking to be treated fairly.

Inclusion that only exists in theory is not inclusion.
Rights without enforcement are just decoration.
People with disabilities deserve more than empty promises.

Policy reform is not abstract to us. It is personal. It is practical. It is urgent.

Stand with us.

If you believe public systems should be fair, accessible, and accountable — we invite you to help us push reform from rhetoric into reality.

Marijuana Advocacy Group Inc. — Policy Reform Statement Because inclusion without enforcement is just decoration.

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