Hemp Legalization In Kentucky
Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner James Comer says an increasing
number of state legislators are lining up in support of legalizing the
growing of hemp as a cash crop for Kentucky farmers.
Bills have been filed in both the Kentucky House and Senate to allow the
growing of industrial hemp after licensing through the agriculture
department.
Speaking before the Kentucky Commodities Conference in Bowling Green
Friday, Comer told WKU Public Radio hemp is a crop with potential uses
for industry, clothing, paper and more. The biggest problem, he said, is
overcoming the opposition of law enforcement agencies that fear growing
hemp could lead to an increase in marijuana growing. The two plants are
almost identical and police say hemp would serve as a cover for
marijuana plots.
Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, who also attended the Conference, has
supported a federal bill in Washington to legalize the growing of
industrial hemp. He told WKU Public Radio he plans to wait to see what
the state legislature does first before pushing the bill on Capitol
Hill. If it's approved in Kentucky, Paul said he would apply for a
waiver from President Obama to remove federal restrictions.
Sen. Paul said hemp would be an especially good crop for farmers in
eastern Kentucky to grow on reclamation lands from coal mining
operations.
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At Conference, Rand Paul Calls For Legal Hemp
Legalizing industrial hemp in Kentucky, passing a federal farm
bill and helping young farmers establish themselves were among subjects
U.S. Sen. Rand Paul and Agriculture Commissioner James Comer took on
Friday evening during a discussion at the Kentucky Commodities
Conference.
Paul said Kentucky might be able to get a waiver – similar to waivers
given for the No Child Left Behind education law – to grow industrial
hemp if state legislation to allow its cultivation passes.
“I think the potential’s enormous for something like this,” the Bowling
Green Republican said at the event, which was held at the Holiday Inn
University Plaza.
Paul has also supported a federal bill to legalize industrial hemp growth.
There is resistance to such legislation from some law enforcement groups
because of the plant’s similarity to marijuana, he said.
“It looks somewhat similar, that’s what they’re concerned about, but we
live in a modern age,” Paul said. “If you get a permit from
Commissioner Comer and they put in the GPS, every sheriff and every
policeman would know where it’s going to be grown.”
Bills have been filed in both houses of the Kentucky General Assembly to
allow people who wish to grow industrial hemp to be licensed through
the Department of Agriculture.
Comer said industrial hemp is a crop with potential.
“I believe that 10 years from now we will look at industrial hemp the
same as soybean,” he said. “It’s a crop that continues to have new uses
every day.”
The Kentucky Narcotics Officers’ Association opposes legalization of
industrial hemp, said Tommy Loving, executive director of the
association and director of the Bowling Green-Warren County Drug Task
Force, when reached by phone after the event.
The only way to tell the difference between hemp and marijuana is through a lab test, he said.
“The hemp would make a great cover crop for marijuana,” Loving said.
His organization is also skeptical about the economic impact the crop
would have in Kentucky. Loving said he thinks an independent study into
the economic potential of industrial hemp would be useful.
Curtis Dame, Hopkins County extension agent for agriculture and natural
resources, said he doesn’t have an opinion on whether industrial hemp
should be legalized. However, he thinks many young farmers would embrace
the opportunity to try growing a new crop.
“If that opportunity were to become available, I know that that crop
could be used in Hopkins County due to our marginal land that we do have
from coal mining,” he said.
Dame, 24, also works on his family’s farm in Jewel City.
He said the inheritance, or estate, tax is one of many barriers to young farmers.
When asked about ways to help young farmers, Paul spoke about repealing
the inheritance tax to ease the burden on young people who inherit
family farms.
“A lot of farmers may be land rich and cash poor,” he said.
A repeal would require a major change in the people being elected to Congress, Paul said.
Comer said there’s a mindset among young people that they can’t make
money in farming, and mentoring programs are important in changing
minds.
“We want to inspire young people to go into production agriculture,” he said.
Paul also told conference participants that he believes a new farm bill
will be passed, but he would like to see food stamp spending separated
from the bill.
The bill sets national agriculture, nutrition, conservation and forestry policy and includes funding for agriculture programs.
In January, Congress passed a nine-month extension of the 2008 farm bill, according to The Associated Press.
Food stamp spending creates a conflict for some fiscally conservative
legislators when considering the farm bill as a whole, though it
originally acted as a way to bring in support for the bill from
legislators from urban areas, Paul said.
“What once brought people together may no longer work to bring people together,” he said.
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