The House is finally considering legislation that will change Florida's hemp market as currently constructed, making many products illegal for in-state production or sale and thereby advantaging out of state producers and retail outlets.
But in a late bid to appease industry stakeholders, a change looks likely ahead before the final passage, even as other, more significant changes were rejected.
Sen. Colleen Burton's bill (SB 1698), which Speaker Paul Renner decided to take up, proposes 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.
Burton's bill enjoys the support of the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS). It was substituted for Rep. Tommy Gregory's measure (HB 1613), which was on the Second Reading Calendar.
But amendments greeted the bill on the Special Order calendar, including one from Gregory that increased the permissible amount of delta-9 THC in hemp extract to 5 mg a serving or 50 mg a container, up from 2 mg and 10 mg limits in the Senate bill. This change means that the bill would have to go back to the Senate if it passes the House.
The sponsor said he'd want no psychoactive compounds in hemp, which is a biological impossibility, but in the interest of compromise with colleagues and meeting the concerns of stakeholders, he filed this amelioration.
A second amendment from Rep. Jim Mooney targeted the use of "dress, trademarks, branding or other related materials, or any imagery or scenery that depicts or signifies characters or symbols known to appeal primarily to persons under 21 years of age, including, but not limited to, superheroes, comic book characters, video game characters, or mythical creatures."
However, it protected the industry in other ways, which the sponsor did not appreciate.
Gregory noted that the Mooney amendment would have reinstated banned substances in the bill, that would include delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol, delta-10-tetrahydrocannabinol, hexahydrocannabinol, tetrahydrocannabinol acetate, tetrahydrocannabiphorol and tetrahydrocannabivarin.
The sponsor wondered why his fellow Republican would allow these substances to be sold. Mooney noted they are federally legal.
Gregory contended the language would gut the bill, and that only people who are "so libertarian that you think you should have recreational drugs sold" would back it.
The amendment failed by voice vote.
The bill says the definition of "hemp" to "outline that hemp extract may not exceed 0.3% total delta-9-THC concentration on a wet-weight basis," language matching 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.
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