Connect with us

Business

Hemp industry calls out FDA for its ‘inconsistent stance’ on regulation

Published

on



More than half a decade after the U.S. Congress legalized the plant, hemp industry folks once again sat before a legislative committee to ask for clear federal regulations for hemp products. However, their appeals were largely overshadowed by heated debate around issues within the Food and Drug Administration itself.

During a House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on Wednesday, Jonathan Miller, general counsel for the Hemp Roundtable, testified that the U.S. hemp industry continues to face “avoidable bureaucratic headwinds” due to FDA’s inconsistent stance on how to regulate it.

The hearing, which was convened to address falling trust in the FDA, particularly around illicit products available to the U.S. public, quickly devolved into partisan exchanges about the impact of thousands of recent FDA employee terminations and their potential effect on food and drug safety.

Amid the infighting, Miller, a former chairman of the Kentucky Democratic Party, did his best to point out the plight of hemp farmers and businesses, displaying a chart showing the collapse of the CBD market following the FDA’s failure to provide regulatory clarity.

“When Congress passed the 2018 Farm Bill, it explicitly legalized the sale of hemp and its derivatives, such as CBD,” Miller said. “But just a few hours after the Farm Bill was signed into law, the FDA reasserted its opinion that it was illegal to market CBD as a dietary supplement.”

He attributed the decline to FDA’s shifting positions on hemp regulation.

“We’ve watched in bewilderment as FDA has jerked back and forth with contradictory opinions,” Miller testified. “First, the agency affirmed its ability to regulate CBD under current law. But then FDA stalled, even ignoring congressional appropriations report directives to take expedited action.”

According to Miller, a promising new industry focused on hemp-derived cannabinoids like Delta-8 and Delta-9 THC has emerged to meet consumer demand, providing a lifeline to American farmers. However, the lack of uniform federal quality control standards has allowed “unscrupulous actors” to distribute poorly manufactured products sometimes inappropriately marketed to children.

Committee Chairman James Comer, a Republican representing Kentucky, questioned Miller on why the FDA has refused to regulate hemp and its derivatives despite having the authority to do so and despite industry requests for oversight.

“They’ve gone back and forth,” Miller responded. “They initially said that they were going to regulate products and then they have now claimed they need to have congressional authorization to allow them to regulate that. We dispute that.”

Miller explained that existing laws already provide numerous safeguards the FDA could implement, including provisions against mislabeled or adulterated products, requirements for good manufacturing practices, reporting of adverse events, and stricter labeling requirements.

Texas Republican Rep. Pete Sessions expressed concerns about risky products, describing them as “dangerous products that create… problems that are harmful to children,” though studies have shown that they proliferate the most in states that lack regulatory frameworks. He referenced WebMD information suggesting marijuana use over several years causes brain effects like “lower IQ, slower processing speed, memory and attention issues.”

Miller acknowledged the problem, stating that the industry strongly opposes selling these products to children but needs regulatory help. “We do our self-regulation as an industry. Our U.S. Hemp Authority helps crack down internally. But only if we get the federal government working with the states will we ensure that this problem goes away,” he said.

Miller stressed that the hemp industry is united behind an approach that includes restricting youth access, increasing quality control standards, standardized labeling, and standardized packaging.

“The hemp industry may be unique in that we are coming to Congress to ask please regulate us,” Miller said.

The 2018 Farm Bill removed hemp and its derivatives from the list of controlled substances, defining hemp as cannabis plants containing less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC. Since then, statehouses across the country have implemented their own regulatory frameworks in the absence of federal action.

Miller concluded by encouraging Congress to consider Sen. Ron Wyden’s legislative efforts or to invest more authority in states to properly regulate their own markets if the FDA continues to delay action.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

Regulatory chaos threatens US hemp industry

Published

on



The U.S. hemp-derived cannabinoid market has swelled in total value, but the industry continues to face serious threats from a messy patchwork of state bans and regulations that are stunting growth and pushing production overseas, according to a leading cannabis economist.

“All this hysteria over cannabinoids is having a profound effect on the fiber and grain environment,” said Beau Whitney, founder of Whitney Economics, told Green Market Report in an interview.

Whitney’s analysis shows the hemp market, including CBD, THC, CBN, CBG and related compounds, has grown into a robust industry that now rivals legal marijuana markets. Two years ago, his firm calculated the total market for hemp-derived cannabinoids ranged from $21.3 billion to $35.8 billion, with a midpoint of $28.4 billion.

Of that total market, Whitney noted that “about $21 billion was available on the legal side and then about $7 billion was on the illicit side.”

Recent surveys conducted by Whitney in states, including Arizona, Illinois, Tennessee and Texas, validated these projections. “In states where I could get data and states that allowed for the sales, that’s where (the data is) really solid,” Whitney said. “They’re being confirmed as being conservative.”

While it isn’t an apples-to-apples comparison, since Whitney’s measuring total market potential for hemp against only legal sales in the marijuana world, the economist said it’s becoming nearly impossible to measure legal hemp sales accurately as state regulations constantly shift.

“Every time I turn around, a different state has a different proposal to ban all of this,” Whitney said.

As a result, Whitney’s firm focuses on measuring total market potential rather than solely legal sales. Still, he sees potential growth beyond current projections, especially with hemp-derived cannabis beverages making a splashy entrance to the market.

“Hemp-derived cannabis beverages, Delta-9 beverages, are coming on in a big way,” he said, noting these products are breaking out of traditional CBD shops and into “bars, liquor stores, restaurants and grocery stores.”

According to Whitney, legislative approaches to hemp cannabinoids have had unintended consequences across the broader hemp industry. The confusion also affects hemp fiber and grain sectors that have nothing to do with intoxicating products.

“Banks are debanking hemp fiber and hemp grain companies,” Whitney claimed. “Investors are pulling back on investment into the infrastructure.”

Whitney calculated that “the lost economic potential because of these legislatures was between $20 (billion) and $25 billion dollars.” He added that he’s “taken (his) acreage forecast through 2030 down by over 4 million acres.”

Whitney estimated “an impact to farmers of between $1 (billion) and $3.5 billion in revenue” in lost opportunities.

Licensed hemp acreage plummeted from 525,000 acres in 2019 to just 30,000 acres last year. That decline means there isn’t enough domestic acreage to support the hemp cannabinoid industry, potentially pushing manufacturing overseas.

“It’s driving manufacturers to China and to South America and Canada and anywhere else that can get CBD or CBD biomass,” Whitney said, which creates additional public safety risks as “Chinese CBD is laden with heavy metals.”

He said that the irony is that policies ostensibly designed to protect public safety might actually be increasing risks. “The whole legislative goal of having increased public safety … all their policies are running against that, and they’re actually increasing the public safety risk rather than decreasing it.”

Whitney has long advocated for product-level regulation rather than wholesale bans, suggesting age restrictions, testing requirements and proper labeling would be sufficient, “if it’s intoxicating.”

“That’s all you need to do,” he said.

Additionally, current regulatory approaches, he argued, are creating a false binary.

“The dispensary model for marijuana is failed. It’s an abject failure because it’s limiting people’s access,” he said. “Not everybody wants to go in there.”

Whitney also noted that declining commodity prices for corn, wheat, soybeans and other staple crops have driven farmers to seek higher-revenue alternatives. Hemp represents not only potential increased revenue per acre but also agricultural benefits – if the industry is actually allowed to develop.

“Hemp is a great rotational crop because it helps with the soil, it restores certain aspects of the soil, and it takes impurities out of the soil,” Whitney explained. He added that using hemp in rotation can increase output for subsequent soybean crops “on a significant per bushel level.”

Despite the challenges, Whitney still forecasts potential growth, projecting “a million acres in 2030, which is twice the size of it at its peak.”

Many have attributed much of the regulatory confusion to federal inaction, particularly from the FDA, which has taken a hands-off approach and created much of the uncertainty. Whitney expressed hope that the upcoming farm bill might provide greater clarity, though he noted the legislation “has been pushed out a number of times.”



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading

Business

STATES Act reintroduced in Congress with bipartisan support

Published

on



A small bipartisan group of U.S. House of Representatives members on Thursday reintroduced the long-stalled STATES Act, a pro-marijuana bill that would both nullify the hated 280E tax provision for cannabis companies and also exempt states that have legalized marijuana from federal interference.

The bill, this time called the STATES 2.0 Act, was introduced by U.S. Reps. Dave Joyce (R-OH), Dina Titus (D-NV) and Max Miller (R-OH). Joyce also introduced a separate bill co-sponsored by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) dubbed the PREPARE Act, which is designed to pave the way for federal marijuana legalization.

The first bill’s full name is the Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States (STATES) 2.0 Act. If approved by both chambers and President Donald Trump, it would effectively remove states that have legalized marijuana from the jurisdiction of the federal Controlled Substances Act, reconciling legal tension between federal cannabis prohibition and state marijuana legality.

The bill would also nullify the 280E provision of the federal tax code for licensed cannabis companies in states with legalized marijuana markets, thereby allowing the industry to claim standard business tax deductions and saving companies billions of dollars in taxes per year.

Under the legislation, federal regulation of the national cannabis trade would fall to the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau and the Food and Drug Administration, meaning there would likely be a new federal regulatory framework for businesses that would apply to every state and U.S. territory that has legalized cannabis.

“We can all agree that the current federal approach to cannabis policy is not working. As President Trump has acknowledged, the existing policy has caused unnecessary harm and squandered taxpayer dollars by diverting law enforcement resources from combatting violent crimes,” Joyce, the co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, said in a press release. “The STATES 2.0 Act remedies this issue by bridging the gap between federal and state policy to create a more logical approach to cannabis regulation that allows each state to put the policies in place that work best for their communities.”

Titus, the other co-chair of the Cannabis Caucus, said the STATES Act “ensures the federal government does not interfere with states or tribes that have chosen to legalize cannabis.”

“It’s time for national policy to catch up with the states or at least get out of the way,” Titus said.

The bill would also allow for interstate cannabis commerce, according to Shanita Penny, executive director of the Coalition for Cannabis Policy, Education and Regulation (CPEAR). Penny said the bill would also provide safe harbor for financial institutions, opening access to broader capital markets for marijuana companies.

“We hit on all the typical business concerns” with the new STATES Act, Penny said, adding that if the bill was to become law it would make the SAFE Banking Act unnecessary.

“This is that overarching federal framework that is going to ensure consistency across states for not only businesses … it’s an exciting bill for everybody involved,” Penny said.

That said, the measure’s chances of getting through both chambers of Congress and all the way to the president’s desk are unclear. In past years, most pro-cannabis bills have died in the Senate, even if they made it through the House of Representatives. Penny also noted that so far there’s no Senate version of the STATES Act this year.

“We don’t have a Senate companion bill. So before we can even talk about giving them an opportunity to move forward with this … we still have some work to do there,” she said. “While we certainly haven’t had any indications from Trump that there’s going to be action on this, what we have right now is an opportunity to reengage members… to make sure that when the administration gives us the green light, that we have a bill we can get passed and get onto his desk.”



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading

Arkansas

Arkansas governor spikes medical marijuana drive-thru windows

Published

on



The bill could still become law, however, because Arkansas only requires a simple majority to overturn a governor’s veto.

Drive-thru windows at cannabis shops are a common sight in some states, but Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders isn’t having it on her watch.

On Wednesday, Sanders vetoed a bill from the legislature that would have permitted licensed medical marijuana dispensaries to add drive-thru windows to their shops, saying such a move would’ve “expanded access to usable marijuana,” the Arkansas Times reported.

The bipartisan measure “squeaked through” both chambers of the legislature with the bare minimum of majority votes, the Times reported.

The measure, House Bill 1889, also would have permitted patients to tour dispensaries as they can medical cannabis grows and slashed requirements on the number of workers required to man dispensary delivery vehicles.

Drive-thrus and the other changes could still become law, the Times noted, if the same lawmakers that passed the bill keep their votes the same, because Arkansas law only requires a simple majority in both chambers to override a governor’s veto.

But the odds of a veto override vote happening before the 2025 legislative session adjourns are slim, the Times reported, with regular business for the year concluded and lawmakers not expected to gather again prior to adjourning in a few weeks.

Growth in the southern state’s cannabis market has been stymied by politics in recent years. Last year, a campaign to expand the Arkansas medical marijuana industry was kept off the ballot by a legal challenge, and in 2022, voters shot down a ballot question that would have legalized recreational marijuana.

In the meantime, the Arkansas medical marijuana market has been weathering wholesale price compression even as it watches revenues climb.



Source link

mscannabiz.com
Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading
Mississippi Cannabis News3 hours ago

Easter grass: Christian holiday falls on 4/20, when weed smokers unofficially celebrate – The Clarion-Ledger

Business8 hours ago

Regulatory chaos threatens US hemp industry

Business9 hours ago

STATES Act reintroduced in Congress with bipartisan support

Arkansas11 hours ago

Arkansas governor spikes medical marijuana drive-thru windows

Business12 hours ago

Fluent posts $40M loss for 2024 despite New York entry, other expansion efforts

BelCosta Labs14 hours ago

California regulators suspend cannabis lab’s business license for questionable test results

Mississippi Cannabis News19 hours ago

Two charged after raid on CBD stores in Oxford – The Oxford Eagle

4Front21 hours ago

4Front Ventures delays annual filings, can’t pay auditors

Banking23 hours ago

Safe Harbor Financial, FundCanna team up to tackle cannabis banking headaches

Business1 day ago

Tilray proposes reverse split to drive share price higher

Mississippi Cannabis News1 day ago

Medical marijuana application signups at over 1,800 – Mississippi Today

Business1 day ago

Florida’s marijuana patient base continues to grow as lawmakers target hemp industry

Business2 days ago

Missouri marijuana sales holding steady in 2025

Business2 days ago

Sonoma County joins growing list of California localities rolling back cannabis taxes

Mississippi Cannabis News2 days ago

Mississippi becomes the 37th state to legalize medical marijuana – NPR

Business2 days ago

Canadian cannabis market growth slows to 4% in first quarter

Mississippi Cannabis News2 days ago

Jamaican national arrested in Mississippi with over 715 pounds of marijuana – Caribbean National Weekly

Business2 days ago

Most Canadians support cannabis industry expansion

4/202 days ago

‘Stoner stereotype’ not enough for cannabis marketing

Business3 days ago

Missouri revokes 25 cannabis licenses in social equity program crackdown

best list3 days ago

10 best THCA strains to smoke this 420

Arizona3 days ago

Arizona marijuana market continues downward trend in February

Business3 days ago

Psyence BioMed invests $500,000 more into PsyLabs, locks down Ibogaine supply deal

ABCO Garden State3 days ago

Grown Rogue posts strong early results from ABCO Garden State

best list9 months ago

5 best CBD creams of 2024 by Leafly

Breaking News11 months ago

Connecticut Appoints The US’s First Cannabis Ombudsperson – Yes there is a pun in there and I’m Sure Erin Kirk Is Going To Hear It More Than Once!

Bay Smokes10 months ago

Free delta-9 gummies from Bay Smokes

Mississippi Cannabis News11 months ago

Mississippi city official pleads guilty to selling fake CBD products

cbd11 months ago

New Study Analyzes the Effects of THCV, CBD on Weight Loss

California11 months ago

May 2024 Leafly HighLight: Pink Runtz strain

Breaking News11 months ago

Curaleaf Start Process Of Getting Their Claws Into The UK’s National Health System – With Former MP (Resigned Today 30/5/24) As The Front Man

Mississippi Cannabis News11 months ago

Horn Lake denies cannabis dispensary request to allow sale of drug paraphernalia and Sunday sales | News

California Cannabis Updates11 months ago

Alert: Department of Cannabis Control updates data dashboards with full data for 2023 

Business7 months ago

EU initiative begins bid to open access to psychedelic therapies

Breaking News11 months ago

Nevada CCB to Accept Applications for Cannabis Establishments in White Pine County – “Only one cultivation and one production license will be awarded in White Pine County”

Hemp11 months ago

Press Release: CANNRA Calls for Farm Bill to Clarify Existing State Authority to Regulate Hemp Products

Mississippi Cannabis News11 months ago

People In This State Googled ‘Medical Marijuana’ The Most, Study Shows

Mississippi Cannabis News11 months ago

How to Make Edibles with Alcohol Tinctures » Emily Kyle, MS, RDN

autoflower seeds7 months ago

5 best autoflower seed banks of 2024 by Leafly

best list11 months ago

6 best CBD gummies of 2024 by Leafly

California Cannabis Updates11 months ago

Press Release: May 9, STIIIZY and Healing Urban Barrios hosted an Expungement Clinic & Second Chance Resource Fair

Breaking News11 months ago

Weekly Update: Monday, May 13, 2024 including, New Guide for Renewals & May Board meeting application deadline

best list10 months ago

5 best THC drinks of 2024 by Leafly

DEA11 months ago

President Biden Announces Federal Government Will Reschedule Cannabis in ‘Monumental’ Announcement

Asia Pacific & Australia11 months ago

Thailand: Pro-cannabis advocates rally ahead of the government’s plan to recriminalize the plant

cannabis brands7 months ago

Discover New York’s dankest cannabis brands [September 2024]

Mississippi Cannabis News11 months ago

Local medical cannabis dispensary reacts to MSDH pulling Rapid Analytics License – WLBT

California11 months ago

Senator Cory Booker Visits Sacramento Cannabis Giant Amid Decriminalization Push

Trending