Vermont Completely Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

slumdog80

Well-Known Member
[h=1]Vermont Completely Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban[/h] 3 weeks ago | Politics, US | Posted by Michael Lotfi
  • August 22, 2013

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Vermont has become the most recent state to take a stand against the federal government and nullify the federal ban on hemp cultivation. Governor Shumlin signed the new bill into law in June.
Vermont Nullifies Federal Hemp Ban

Hemp is an agricultural product which may be grown as a crop, produced, possessed, and commercially traded in Vermont pursuant to the provisions of this chapter. The cultivation of hemp shall be subject to and comply with the requirements of the accepted agricultural practices adopted under section 4810 of this title. -Senate Bill 157
According to VoteHemp, a hemp advocate website, Vermont is actually the 9th state to lift the ban on hemp, and 20 states have introduced industrial hemp legislation for the 2013 legislative season. However, what makes Vermont unique is that the new law does not hold a stipulation or amendment requiring the federal government to first lift the ban on hemp cultivation. Much like Colorado, Vermont will proceed regardless of the federal law banning hemp cultivation.
Mike Maharrey, national communications director for the Tenth Amendment Center, tells us:

“I like hemp. The Vermont bill is more aggressive than the other bills we’ve seen pass. I’ve been heavily involved in Kentucky with the passing of their hemp bill, but they are waiting for the feds to actually lift the ban. This means that farmers still will not be able to cultivate. Vermont’s bill allows farmers to go straight ahead regardless of the federal law. This is a straight nullification bill. It gives them the green light as soon as they receive the licence from the state. I think this development is extremely important for the states because you will see markets develop and flourish. If more states begin to follow this path then the federal government may be forced to lift the ban. The US is the only industrialized nation that doesn’t allow cultivation of hemp. We have to import all of it. In fact, the US imports 1/2 of all Canada’s hemp. We have thousands of manufacturing companies and stores importing raw hemp and hemp products.“
Maharrey says that many opponents argue the market for hemp doesn’t exist in America. “How can you say there isn’t a market when you have never allowed one to exist,” he counters. Maharrey adds, “If we are importing 1/2 of another country’s entire production- there is obviously a market. If not let’s lift the ban, and if the market isn’t there then it will simply vanish.”
According Ray Hanson with the Agricultural Marketing Resource Center:
“The combined retail value of hemp food and body care products sold in the United States in 2010 was $40.5 million, up more than 10 percent from 2009, according to the market research firm SPINS. (The same firm estimated that 2009 sales of hemp products reached $36.6 million.) The Hemp Industries Association (HIA) estimated that the retail value of North American hemp food, vitamin and body care products was in the range of $121 to $142 million in 2010. When clothing, auto parts, building materials and other non-food or body care products are included, the HIA estimates that the total retail value of U.S. hemp products is about $419 million.“
 

woodsusa

Well-Known Member
It's a valuable crop in so many ways. Fibers for paper, cloth, etc. Fuel, a source of high quality oil from the seeds. The seeds are edible and from what I understand are one of a very few vegetable sources of all the essential amino acids needed for food. Plus hemp probably grows on just about any kind of soil there is.
 

Huel Perkins

Well-Known Member
This is so awesome! Awesome for another step in ending cannabis prohibition and a big step in creating jobs and money for honest Americans. One greatly over looked aspect of this is that Industrial hemp strains are still a valuable source of cannabis medicine and even the gateway for breeding ultra high CBD strains of cannabis that can still be low enough in Delta9 THC to still meet world wide standards of legal industrial crops.
 

Huel Perkins

Well-Known Member
BTW, Michigan needs this! Does anyone know who the best members of Michigan government are to contact to make this happen for our state?

Nullification of an unjust law is a beautiful thing, this is the type of laws and government that made United States of America the greatest nation in the world.
 

woodsmantoker

Well-Known Member
Its very intelegent. While other states legalize pot smoking and have to hurdle the hoops in all of that, VT legalizes the big industy first. Nice move VT. Hats off.
 

Pimpernickel

Well-Known Member
I wonder what they consider the line between hemp and marijuana. If I was in Vermont I'd start up a farming company that grew the shittiest hemp on the market. It would have slender, non-fibrous stems, and gigantic flowers covered in trichs. I wonder how long it would take for market forces to drive me into bankruptcy.
 

dr.tree

Member
I need a tractor a a ride to Vermont bad anyone help? I love the short hemp idea, I was thinking that mixed with a auto. Beat em to the punch
 
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