Legislation crimping the state's hemp industry, currently the second biggest in the country in terms of agricultural area allotted to the plant, was unanimously passed by the Senate to a round of applause, while a similar bill moves through House committees.
Sen. Colleen Burton's bill (SB 1698) proposes a number of material changes to what the sponsor calls an "unregulated market" and a "continuation" of work begun by the Legislature in 2023.
These include a ban on currently commercially available and federally legal products, along with a cap on delta-9 THC, which could negatively affect the 487 growers and roughly 10,000 retail outlets in the state.
Her bill enjoys the support of the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS). And it came with new changes during its first hearing by the full Senate on Wednesday, a meeting that set up the floor vote.
Democrats affirmed the bill as well, with Sen. Tracie Davis of Jacksonville differentiating between the "almost perfection" of regulation in the medical marijuana sector, and the need to "make sure Floridians are protected" from other cannabis products.
Amendments added ahead of the floor vote include language deeming products that look like "toys" as attractive to children, $2 million in nonrecurring funds to allow the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for testing equipment, and language pushing back the effective date of the legislation to Oct. 1, 2024, to allow more time for implementation.
Other than those changes, the legislation is the same as it had been in previous stops.
The bill would ban alternative cannabinoids that serve as functional alternatives to delta-9 THC, the euphoria-inducing compound commodified by the state's medical marijuana program.
The banned substances would include delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol, delta-10-tetrahydrocannabinol, hexahydrocannabinol, tetrahydrocannabinol acetate, tetrahydrocannabiphorol and tetrahydrocannabivarin.
It revises the definition of "hemp" to "outline that hemp extract may not exceed 0.3% total delta-9-THC concentration on a wet-weight basis or exceed 2 milligrams per serving and 10 milligrams per container on a wet-weight basis."
That sets a more rigorous standard than the federal one established in the 2018 Farm Bill that created initial parameters for the then-fledgling industry without arbitrary packaging limits. It would also impact full-spectrum CBD products, which meet the federal requirements and include minor cannabinoids as well.
The bill, if it passes, is a boon to the medical marijuana industry, as it removes competition for market share the hemp sector provides with THC, HHC and other cannabinoids that interact with CB1 receptors.
A previously identical version of the bill (HB 1613) is moving through the House as well, with the GOP Rep. Tommy Gregory product in committee Thursday. The House sponsor has filed amendments that conform with the Senate product.
No comments:
Post a Comment