Hoboken residents will have to wait a bit longer to get their marijuana fix.

Harmony Foundation, a Secaucus-based cannabis company, is postponing its application to open a medical marijuana dispensary at 95 Hudson St., after Mayor Ravi Bhalla vetoed an ordinance allowing medical cannabis sales in downtown Hoboken.

“Harmony has carried its site plan application to the next Planning Board meeting because Hoboken is currently revising the requirements governing the application process," Harmony CEO Shaya Brodchandel said in an emailed statement. "Harmony looks forward to completing its application in Hoboken as soon as possible.”

The vetoed ordinance would have paved the way for the sale of medicinal marijuana in Hoboken’s C-1 zone district — a downtown area close to the PATH station. Harmony, which has a dispensary in Secaucus, applied to open a second facility in Hoboken after Gov. Phil Murphy loosened marijuana regulations.

“The patient community is growing very quickly in the state of New Jersey,” Brodchandel said last month. “This (location) will be much more accessible.”

But Bhalla’s veto has pushed back the possibility of a dispensary in the Mile Square City.

“I have no opposition to medical cannabis dispensaries in the C-1 district," Bhalla said in a veto statement. “That being said, the reason for this veto is that (the ordinance) references compliance with two (2) sections of the Hoboken municipal code ... which are currently in a state of flux."

Hoboken spokesman Vijay Chaudhuri said Hoboken’s government was still discussing laws surrounding who could obtain a license to sell cannabis and where.

“The number of licenses in the city, the maximum number of licenses per zone, where the borders of the zone are” were all still under discussion, Chaudhuri said in an email.

The City Council was also debating a municipal tax on cannabis sales, he said.

In his veto statement, Bhalla floated the idea of legislation to answer all the open questions about marijuana.

"My preferred approach is a package of amendments to the medical cannabis ordinances that comprehensively addresses all related matters,” Bhalla wrote.