
A Regulated Trip: What New Mexico's Psilocybin Law Means For Work
This spring, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed Senate Bill 219, the Medical Psilocybin Act, into law, making New Mexico the third state to legalize psilocybin for medical use. Unlike Oregon and Colorado, which adopted their psilocybin programs through ballot initiatives, New Mexico enacted its law through the legislative process. That distinction is more than procedural. It reflects an institutional shift toward integrating psychedelic therapy into the framework of state-managed healthcare.
The law took effect on June 20, 2025, and requires full program implementation by December 31, 2027. With that, New Mexico becomes the first state to create a clinician-administered psilocybin program governed by medical oversight, not consumer access. As psilocybin therapy enters a regulated medical model, employers must now examine how psilocybin intersects with workplace safety, disability accommodation, and drug policy enforcement.
Psilocybin's Reintroduction as Medicine
Psilocybin is a naturally occurring psychedelic compound found in certain mushrooms. Once ingested, it metabolizes into psilocin, which affects cognition, mood, and perception. Although it remains a Schedule I substance under federal law, psilocybin has reemerged over the past decade as a potential breakthrough therapy for severe mental health conditions. Peer-reviewed research continues to highlight its therapeutic potential in treating major depression, PTSD, substance use disorders, and end-of-life distress.
New Mexico's legislation embraces this emerging science by establishing a medical-use program in which licensed clinicians, not dispensaries, administer psilocybin in approved therapeutic settings. The Department of Health is responsible for creating treatment protocols, licensing standards, clinician training, and oversight mechanisms. The Act also establishes both a research fund and a treatment equity fund to expand access and support clinical study.
Psychedelic wellness expert Cesar Marin sees the program as a reflection of how far public understanding has evolved. 'We're not talking about the free‑wheeling psychedelic trips of the 1960s anymore,' Marin says. 'We're seeing most states consider or enact some form of psychedelic policy reform, and that momentum helps people feel more comfortable with the intentional, therapeutic use of psilocybin.'
Qualifying conditions are narrowly defined to include treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, substance use disorder, and terminal illness. All treatment must occur in controlled environments with preparatory and integration sessions surrounding the administration of psilocybin. Psilocybin and psilocin are removed from the state's list of Schedule I controlled substances when used in accordance with the law, and services provided under the Act are exempt from New Mexico's gross receipts tax.
Legal Protections Without Workplace Requirements
The Medical Psilocybin Act offers strong protections for individuals operating within its boundaries. Licensed clinicians, producers, and qualified patients cannot be prosecuted under state law, and individuals on probation or awaiting trial may participate in treatment without jeopardizing their legal status. However, the Act stops short of granting any employment-based rights. It does not require employers to accommodate psilocybin use, nor does it prevent adverse action based on lawful participation in the program.
That omission is deliberate and significant. While patients may legally participate in psilocybin-assisted therapy under state law, the federal classification of psilocybin as a Schedule I substance remains unchanged. And unlike medical cannabis laws in some states, New Mexico's psilocybin law provides no employment protections, no retaliation standard, and no accommodation framework.
Still, employers should not assume the workplace will remain untouched.
A New Compliance Challenge for Employers
'New Mexico legalizing medical psilocybin is a huge step toward bringing these treatments out of the shadows and into mainstream medicine,' says Marin. 'When folks see local leaders endorsing these programs, it lowers the fear factor and makes it easier for someone who's curious to explore them.'
That shift in perception could soon reach the workplace. Employers may begin receiving accommodation requests from individuals participating in medically supervised psilocybin therapy for conditions like PTSD, treatment-resistant depression, or substance use disorder. And while psilocybin remains a federally controlled substance, the conditions it treats are often considered disabilities under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
That means employers have a legal obligation to engage in the interactive process when an employee discloses a disability and requests accommodation, even if the employee's treatment involves a Schedule I substance like psilocybin. The ADA does not require employers to accommodate federally illegal drug use, but it does require them to consider accommodations related to the underlying condition.
Employers are not obligated to tolerate on-the-job impairment or excuse safety violations. Still, if an employee reports off-duty participation in a licensed psilocybin program tied to a recognized condition, a flat denial without further inquiry could invite scrutiny under disability discrimination laws.
Testing vs. Impairment: Where Policy Meets Practicality
Psilocybin presents unique challenges when it comes to workplace drug testing. Unlike THC or opioids, psilocin, the active compound after ingestion, is not included in most standard employment drug panels. That means employers may be flying blind when it comes to detecting recent psilocybin use unless they specifically request an expanded panel.
'A person can be actively hallucinating due to psilocybin use and still pass a standard workplace drug test,' says Dr. Todd Simo, Chief Medical Officer at HireRight. 'Psilocin, the active compound, doesn't show up in most drug panels unless an employer specifically includes it. That's why training managers to recognize signs of impairment and providing a clear path to escalate reasonable suspicion are more effective strategies. For employers especially concerned, developing a reasonable suspicion panel that includes psilocybin and disclosing it to employees in advance can also help mitigate misuse.'
Given that reality, employers may want to prioritize impairment-based enforcement strategies over reliance on traditional drug screening. While testing has its place, especially in post-accident investigations or in regulated industries, training supervisors to recognize signs of real-time impairment and respond consistently under internal policy is likely a more practical approach for most workplaces.
Preparing for Disclosure and Dialogue
Employers should take this opportunity to review and, where necessary, revise internal policies addressing drug and alcohol use, workplace impairment, and reasonable accommodations. Clarity around off-duty substance use and on-duty safety expectations will be essential. HR teams should also ensure that accommodation request procedures are equipped to handle emerging treatment disclosures, particularly where mental health conditions are involved.
Equally important is creating an environment in which employees feel safe discussing mental health. Psilocybin's path to medical legitimacy mirrors, in many ways, the evolution of medical cannabis and broader mental health parity. For employers, staying ahead of these developments will require not only legal awareness but organizational empathy.
The Bigger Picture
New Mexico's Medical Psilocybin Act signals more than therapeutic access. It reflects a policy evolution, one where lawmakers, not just voters, are beginning to treat psychedelic medicine as a legitimate part of behavioral healthcare. The state's approach shifts the narrative from stigma to structure, putting psilocybin in the hands of trained clinicians operating under medical oversight. And while the law places no new obligations on employers, it surfaces a timely question: what does it mean to support mental health in a world where the frontier of treatment is changing?
For employers, that shift invites action. It's time to revisit drug policies, reconsider testing strategies, and refine accommodation practices. As state-level momentum builds around psychedelics, employers don't need to endorse these therapies, but they do need to understand them. Because in the modern workplace, curiosity can be a better compliance strategy than surprise.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Measles case confirmed in Passaic County, New Jersey, health officials say
A case of measles has been confirmed in Passaic County, New Jersey, health officials announced Saturday. According to the state Department of Health, the patient recently traveled internationally, and this case is not related to measles cases in Hudson and Ocean counties that were reported in July. Health officials say the patient visited the Chilton Medical Center in Pompton Plains while contagious. Anyone who was in the emergency department between 7 p.m. on July 31 and 3:30 a.m. on Aug. 1 or the main hospital's fifth floor Intensive Care Unit between 1:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. on Aug. 1 may have been exposed to measles. Anyone who was exposed at those times could develop symptoms as late as Aug. 24, if infected. This is the sixth case of measles in New Jersey so far this year. Measles is spread when an infected person coughs or sneezes and can remain in the air for up to two hours. It can also be spread through an infected person's mucus or saliva. According to health officials, measles symptoms include high fever, cough, runny nose, watery red eyes, and a rash that appears as flat red spots on the face and all over the body. Anyone who suspects they have or were exposed to measles should call their local health department or health care provider to make special arrangements for evaluation. Potential patients are urged to call ahead before arriving at a medical office or emergency department due to the risk of infecting other visitors and medical staff. Those who have not received both doses of the MMR vaccine or had measles in the past are most at risk of becoming infected. All New Jersey residents are encouraged to stay up to date on vaccinations, and anyone travelling internationally should be fully vaccinated before leaving the country, the health department says. Data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in July shows 2025 is the worst year for measles in the United States since 1992. There have been 14 measles cases in New York so far this year, according to the latest state health department data. That includes seven cases in New York City, four cases in Orange County, one in Putnam County, one in Suffolk County and one in Ontario County. There have not been any cases of measles in Connecticut so far this year.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
NSC Applauds Senate Appropriations Committee Passage of Bill Keeping OSHA, NIOSH Funding Steady
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, the National Safety Council issued the following statement in response to the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee's passage of legislation that keeps funding steady for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). The Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, which passed out of committee by a vote of 26-3, maintains FY2026 funding for OSHA at the FY2025 level and slightly increases FY2026 funding for NIOSH over the FY2025 level. The bill now moves to the full Senate. "The National Safety Council applauds the Senate Appropriations Committee on its decisive vote to keep funding steady for OSHA and NIOSH," said Lorraine Martin, CEO of NSC. "We urge the House and full Senate to approve these funding levels, which are necessary to keep America safe at work." The committee's report language accompanying the bill shines a spotlight on several safety issues, including opioid use in the workplace and heat-related injuries. In expressing concern over the prevalence of opioid use in the workplace, the committee cited NSC data showing that while 75% of employers reported seeing opioid use impact their workplace, only 17% reported being well-prepared to address it. The committee encourages the Secretary of Labor to issue guidance to employers on providing opioid overdose reversal medication and training in the workplace. Learn more about workplace unintentional overdose deaths here: Uncertainty over NIOSH's budget in particular has swirled for months, with an 80% budget cut proposed in June by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In the report, the committee recognized the vital role NIOSH plays in protecting American workers as "the only Federal agency responsible for conducting research and making recommendations for the prevention of work-related illness and injury" and directed the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention "to ensure work continues in NIOSH research centers nationwide." About the National Safety CouncilThe National Safety Council is America's leading nonprofit safety advocate – and has been for over 110 years. As a mission-based organization, we work to eliminate the leading causes of preventable death and injury, focusing our efforts on the workplace and roadways. We create a culture of safety to not only keep people safer at work, but also beyond the workplace so they can live their fullest lives. Connect with NSC:Facebook Twitter LinkedIn YouTube Instagram ©2025 National Safety Council View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE National Safety Council


Politico
a day ago
- Politico
Senate appropriators defend the NIH
WASHINGTON WATCH Senate appropriators came out hard in support of the National Institutes of Health on Thursday, giving the agency a $400 million funding boost for the 2026 fiscal year. How so: The Senate Appropriations Committee upped the agency's budget to $48.7 billion in the 2026 funding bill that cleared the panel with a 26-3 vote Thursday. If the bill becomes law, it would increase cancer research by $150 million; Alzheimer's research by $100 million and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, research by $25 million. The NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Office of Research on Women's Health would each get a $30 million boost. Research on maternal mortality, diabetes and rare diseases would also see an increase, among others. Why it matters: The funding boost is a rebuke from both Republicans and Democrats to the Trump administration's demand to decrease the NIH funding in the next fiscal year by as much as 40 percent, or $18 billion. Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) said the legislation 'prioritizes funding to help make Americans healthier and supports life-saving medical research.' Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), the top Democrat on the panel, said the budget increase was a message to 'the scientists wondering if there will even be an NIH by the end of this administration. This committee's resounding message is: 'Yes, Congress has your back.'' Murray urged scientists to continue their research in the U.S. despite the efforts of other countries to lure them away. The appropriators also adopted an amendment Thursday that would limit the Trump administration's control over NIH research funding. An amendment in the bill's manager's package limits the administration's plan to shift funding for most NIH grants from a multiyear schedule to an upfront single-year payment. The amendment states that no funds appropriated in the fiscal 2026 spending bill can be used to increase the proportion of grants fully funded in the first year of the award, compared with fiscal 2024. The NIH can only increase that proportion of forward-funded grants if the agency ensures it isn't cutting grants to do so. What's next: The bill is cleared for floor action. But congressional leaders haven't started bipartisan negotiations toward overall government funding totals, increasing the odds that lawmakers will again resort to a stopgap funding patch before the next fiscal year starts on Oct. 1. WELCOME TO FUTURE PULSE This is where we explore the ideas and innovators shaping health care. Peacock feathers have reflective structures that can amplify light into a laser beam, Science reports. Share any thoughts, news, tips and feedback with Carmen Paun at cpaun@ Ruth Reader at rreader@ or Erin Schumaker at eschumaker@ Want to share a tip securely? Message us on Signal: CarmenP.82, RuthReader.02 or ErinSchumaker.01. MORNING MONEY: CAPITAL RISK — POLITICO's flagship financial newsletter has a new Friday edition built for the economic era we're living in: one shaped by political volatility, disruption and a wave of policy decisions with sector-wide consequences. Each week, Morning Money: Capital Risk brings sharp reporting and analysis on how political risk is moving markets and how investors are adapting. Want to know how health care regulation, tariffs, or court rulings could ripple through the economy? Start here. WORLD VIEW A draft United Nations plan to make the world healthier no longer includes several targets cracking down on sugary drinks, trans fats and tobacco to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases globally. Struck down: A target of 80 percent of countries taxing sugary drinks at levels recommended by the World Health Organization by 2030, POLITICO's Rory O'Neill reports. That goal was a pillar of the initial draft, which will take the form of a nonbinding political declaration world leaders are expected to endorse at a Sept. 25 meeting in New York, on the margins of the U.N. General Assembly. The latest version has also dropped commitments to eliminate trans fats and aims instead to reduce them to the 'lowest level possible.' It also requires front-of-pack labels with nutritional information. A requirement for health warnings on tobacco packaging to be graphic and accompanied by elements that make it unattractive to consumers is also gone. The new draft has softer language on tobacco advertising, requiring countries to restrict it instead of eliminate it. 'Make no mistake, the Declaration in its current form is a backslide,' said Alison Cox, director of policy and advocacy at the NCD Alliance, in a statement. The alliance is a Switzerland-based civil society group working to promote chronic disease prevention. Why it matters: World leaders aim to reduce premature mortality from noncommunicable diseases such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes by 2030 through prevention and treatment and to improve mental health and well-being globally. Noncommunicable diseases killed 18 million people under age 70 in 2021, according to the WHO. Most deaths were in low- and middle-income countries. The aims align with the U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Make America Healthy Again agenda, but it's unclear how much the U.S. is involved in drafting the final text. HHS did not respond to a request for comment. What's next: Negotiators are meeting this week in New York to discuss the text.