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US: DEA Rules Ban Edible Hemp Products

Christie Wilson

Honolulu Advertiser

Tuesday 09 Oct 2001

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Supporters of industrial hemp say they will
pursue a temporary restraining order and other
legal action to halt implementation of federal
rules issued yesterday that would ban edible
hemp products.

The rules by the Drug Enforcement
Administration, published in the Federal
Register, give merchants 120 days to dispose of
food products such as beer, pasta, tortilla
chips, candy bars, salad dressing and cheese
when the items contain tetrahydrocannabinols,
known as THC.

Exemptions apply to products such as paper,
animal feed, clothing and rope, and personal-
care items such as shampoos, soaps and lotions.

Hemp advocates had expressed concern that the
new rules would outlaw personal-care items, but
an interim rule also published in the Federal
Register yesterday said that without any studies
available on whether these products introduce
THC into the body, the agency will assume they
do not and thus exempt them from the Controlled
Substances Act.

THC is the compound that gives marijuana its
euphoric effect. Supporters of industrial hemp,
another form of cannabis, argue that THC levels
in hemp are too low to have any narcotic effect.

Although Kathy Barr, owner of the Hemp House
in Pa'ia, Maui, apparently will be able to
continue manufacturing a popular line of hemp-
based lotions, she said she was shocked by the
DEA ruling on food products.

"I never thought they would do it. I thought
they had some understanding that you don't get
high from the product and it's wonderful for
you," she said.

The DEA said it was issuing its interpretation
of the Controlled Substances Act because of
numerous inquiries in recent months regarding
hemp products that contain THC.

The agency said it rejected arguments that
classifying hemp as a controlled substance is
contrary to court rulings and the history of
federal drug laws.

Representatives of the international Hemp
Industries Association, which held its
convention on Maui last week, and the Vote
Hemp Inc. advocacy group are in Washington
coordinating legal action against the DEA
rules.

In a joint statement, David Bronner and Eric
Steenstra of Vote Hemp characterized the
rules as the latest attempt by the DEA to
"sabotage" the hemp industry. They said DEA
has chosen to ignore the industry-established
Test Pledge program in which hemp companies
assure consumers they will not test positive
for marijuana in workplace drug screenings,
even if they consume large amounts of food
containing hemp.


 

 

 

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