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US: Industrial Hemp Push Underway in California, North Dakota

Drug War Chronicle

Friday 16 Jun 2006

---
Moves are afoot in California and North Dakota to win approval of
industrial hemp production at the state level, but the ultimate goal is
removing the federal government as an obstacle to domestic cultivation
of the valuable and versatile plant. Under current US law, hemp products
are legal and hemp may be imported to be used in products produced here,
but the plant itself cannot legally be grown in the US.

Still, seven states -- Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Montana, North
Dakota and West Virginia -- have changed their laws to give farmers an
affirmative right to grow industrial hemp commercially or for research
purposes. This week, North Dakota took another step toward adopting
administrative rules and regulations to breathe some life into its law
with a public hearing Thursday. And in California, a bill that would
move the Golden State to the hemp camp has already passed the state
Assembly and is moving in the Senate after a legislative hearing Tuesday.

Hemp is classified as the same species as marijuana, Cannabis sativa L.,
but is a different cultivar and possesses different characteristics.
Most important legally, hemp is distinguished from marijuana by its very
low levels of THC, the primary psychoactive component in marijuana. Hemp
plants typically contain THC levels under 1%. In the Dakotas, feral
hemp, or "ditch weed," descended from the "victory hemp" of World War II
grows everywhere, and, as local farm boy wisdom puts it: "You could
smoke a joint the size of a telephone pole, and all you'd get is a sore
throat and a headache."

Industrial hemp proponents point not only to the downright silliness of
classifying hemp as a controlled substance, but also to its virtues as
an agricultural crop and industrial product. The plant's fibers can be
used to make everything from paper to automobile panels, while its seeds
and oils are in high demand in the ever-growing hemp food industry. Next
door to North Dakota, the Canadian hemp crop has expanded to 40,000
acres in the past six years, and American farmers want some of the action.

"With our proximity to the Canadian border, we can see hemp fields from
here," said North Dakota Agriculture Department plant industries program
manager Jeff Olson, whose boss, Agriculture Commissioner Roger Johnson
is leading the push to get regulations in place. "We see it as another
agronomic tool for farmers. There is plenty of economic potential there,
and it is something farmers could consider growing instead of wheat,
barley, or corn," he told DRCNet. "We passed our legislation back in
1999 after a groundswell from farmers led Assistant Majority Leader
David Monson (R-Osnabrook) to sponsor it. Now it's working its way
through the process."

A hearing on the regulations was set for Thursday, Olson said Wednesday
afternoon, and it looked as if it would be favorable. The hemp industry
would be well-represented, Olson said, while no opponents have signed up
to speak. "We have a representative from Vote Hemp, and there will be a
Canadian researcher, among quite a number we're expecting," he said. In
written testimony, there was only one objection to the notion of
industrial hemp, "from law enforcement out of South Dakota," he explained.

The regulations being discussed Thursday would allow farmers to grow
hemp under the law passed in 1999. It won't be as easy as planting a
crop of wheat or corn, though. "Under our law, farmers have to pass a
criminal background check and apply for a license to grow. They will
have to pay a per acre fee. There are requirements on how it's planted;
it can't be surrounded by other crops and hidden from view," said Olson.
"They will be inspected periodically throughout the summer, and if we
grant them a permit, they will then have to apply to the DEA for
permission," he told DRCNet.

North Dakota Ag Commissioner Johnson went to Washington in February
along with ag commissioners from Massachusetts, West Virginia, and
Wisconsin to meet with the DEA to seek ways of allowing industrial hemp
production. In a statement issued at the time, Johnson said DEA
officials were "cordial," but they warned legalizing hemp would be
"extremely complicated" under existing law. "DEA has never responded to
our earlier inquiries," Johnson said, "but today, we were able to
present our case and learn from them what may be required in terms of
regulations and safeguards."

Good luck, if the DEA's past (and present) position is any indication.
The agency did not return DRCNet calls for comment, but DEA spokeswoman
Rogene Waite reiterated the agency's longstanding position in an
interview with the Associated Press last month, where she stated flatly
that the federal drug laws do not distinguish between hemp and marijuana
because both contain THC.

Still, Olson had an optimistic view for the record. "We're hoping that
DEA will look at industrial hemp separately form marijuana. We don't
think industrial hemp meets the definition of a drug, and our goal is to
have the DEA determine that yes, hemp and marijuana are two separate
plants to be regulated separately."

Meanwhile, in Sacramento, the California Senate Public Safety Committee
held a hearing Tuesday on that state's hemp bill, AB 1147. Sponsored by
Assemblyman Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), the bill "would require
industrial hemp to be cultivated only from seeds imported in accordance
with federal law or from seeds grown in California, as specified" and
would not authorize "the transportation or sale across state borders of
seed or any variety of Cannabis sativa L. that is capable of germination."

The bill sets an upper permissible THC limit of 0.3% and requires
laboratory tests of the crop to verify it. But it is the language about
seeds that is crucial for strategic reasons.

"We're hoping that carefully crafted state regulations that explicitly
prevent the parts of the plant controlled by the DEA -- the seeds and
the flowers -- from leaving the state will mean the DEA has no power to
regulate inside the state as long as farmers are following the state
regulations, but that will probably require that we file a lawsuit,"
said Alexis Baden-Mayer, director of governmental relations for Vote Hemp.

The California bill does just that. "It was drafted specifically with
the idea of limiting the crop to the production of legal substances and
not letting viable seeds leave the state," said Baden-Mayer. "If
California started to grow hemp, viable seeds would not cross the state
line." It would be inconvenient for the industry, but "would be worth it
for states to not engage in interstate commerce in hemp seed to avoid
DEA control," she told DRCNet.

Although the Supreme Court a year ago rejected a similar challenge to
the federal government's use of the interstate commerce clause to extend
federal jurisdiction to medical marijuana, this would be different,
Baden-Mayer argued. "Unlike the medical marijuana case, all the
commodities associated with industrial hemp are legal. The only thing
that's not legal right now is the plant in the ground."

But the California bill must pass before it can provide the basis for a
legal challenge to DEA control over hemp, and North Dakota must get its
regulations in order before farmers there can start the permitting
process. The California bill faces a committee vote and a Senate floor
vote before passing -- neither of which is assured at this point. And
the North Dakota Ag Commission's Olson said given the process, farmers
would be lucky to be permitted in time for the 2007 crop, and 2008 is
more likely.

It can't happen soon enough for US agriculture. "American farmers are
tired of looking around the world and seeing other farmers making
healthy profits growing hemp for export to the US. They want change,"
said Vote Hemp President Eric Steenstra.

Farmers aren't the only ones looking for a domestic hemp industry.
Increases in US hemp food production -- sales are up 50% a year, said
Vote Hemp -- are increasing demand for hemp seed and may cause hemp seed
shortages to develop. The natural fiber composite industry, which has
largely replaced fiberglass in vehicle interiors, is also hungry for
hemp made in America. FlexForm, an Indiana manufacturer who uses 250,000
pounds of hemp fiber a year, is eager to expand its use of the fibers.
"Hemp fiber possesses physical properties beneficial to our natural
fiber-based composites," FlexForm said, adding that it would "gladly
expand domestic purchases."

It has been 50 years since the last legal industrial hemp crop was
planted in Wisconsin. It is not quite back yet, but industrial hemp in
the US is poised to make a comeback -- if only the federal government
will get out of the way or can be adjudicated out of the way.

http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/440/hempbills.shtml

 

 

 

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