News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: OPED: Putting The Hemp Back In Hempfield |
Title: | US PA: OPED: Putting The Hemp Back In Hempfield |
Published On: | 2000-08-20 |
Source: | Sunday News (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 11:40:37 |
PUTTING THE HEMP BACK IN HEMPFIELD
It's Time For Pennsylvania, And The County, To Join The Crowd On
Industrial Hemp
About 2 1/2 months ago Maryland became the fourth state to authorize
the cultivation of hemp. On July 1 Maryland became the third state to
actually plant hemp seeds. This important test crop is growing right
now.
Maryland now joins Hawaii, Minnesota and North Dakota as states that
have passed positive hemp legislation that will allow farmers to
cultivate hemp.
Nineteen other states have passed prohemp resolutions or have hemp
legislation either waiting to be passed, under consideration or are
undertaking studies on the economic potential of a revitalized hemp
industry. They include Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois,
Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Oregon, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin and
Pennsylvania.
Interest in hemp is intense and increasing. Hawaii planted hemp on Dec.
14,1999. There is hope that hemp will boost a sagging farm economy hurt
by the loss of sugar cane, formerly Hawaii's number one cash crop.
After passing positive hemp legislation in Minnesota last year, Gov.
Jesse Ventura gathered farmers together to instruct them on how to
apply for permits to grow hemp. He also wrote a letter to the Clinton
administration, formally requesting that the federal government remove
restrictions that prevent farmers from growing hemp right now.
Gov. Ed Schafer of North Dakota signed positive hemp legislation on
March 17, 1999. The people of that state watched and learned from their
neighbors across the border in Canada who have been successfully
cultivating and profiting from the newly revitalized and rapidly
expanding billion dollar hemp industry for half a decade now.
It is no wonder that North Dakota became the first state to pass
positive hemp legislation. Farmers there are poised to grow hemp,
especially for seed and oil as processing plants for flax seed oil
already exist in the area and can easily process hemp seed oil.
In addition, the Navajo Nation and the Oglala Lakota tribe have
announced intentions to grow hemp for self-sufficiency and as a boost
to local economies. The Oglala Lakota held a planting ceremony on April
29, the 132nd anniversary of the signing of the Fort Laramie Treaty.
The hemp harvested on the Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota
will be used to make hemp-based concrete that is lighter and easier to
work with than masonry concrete. It will be used as part of a building
project on Pine Ridge to address a severe housing shortage.
Here in Lancaster, interest in the cultivation, processing,
manufacturing and marketing of hemp has been shown by the Lancaster
Farm Bureau, individual members and Leaders of the Tobacco Marketing
Association, agricultural research firms and experimental farms, a
textile factory, bankers, agribusiness, township supervisors, a Kiwanis
club, a Rotary club, some political candidates and scores of farmers.
It has caught the, attention of the media, the Pennsylvania Department
of Agriculture, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, the Department of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology at Pennsylvania State
University, student activists at Millersville University and average
citizens.
Historical craftsmen are eager to work with locally grown hemp fibers.
There is a growing awareness of the historical significance of hemp in
Lancaster County.
In a forum on hemp held in Yoders Restaurant (of New Holland) in March,
Jean Laprise, an Ontario hemp farmer, pointed out that Lancaster County
would have a tremendous geographic advantage in marketing of hemp. We
are strategically placed in the center of a major population belt with
many industries that could make use of hemp raised here.
Already here in Lancaster County there are many businesses that either
import, produce or sell hemp foods, products and textiles. Hemp seed
and oil products are being sold In local grocery and health food
stores. The malls and other retail stores have carried hemp products
for years now. Profits from sales of hemp products locally as well as
nationally are projected to exceed all previous years.
Pennsylvania is the Keystone State. Our northeast corner borders a
major hemp growing region in Ontario where tens of thousands of acres
of hemp are cultivated yearly. The Maryland border graces Lancaster
County. We'll be able to see their hemp right up close. Are we to sit
idly by and just watch it grow?
The time to enact legislation that will allow our farmers to cultivate
industrial hemp is right now.
Les Stark, of Ephrata, is a researcher/historian specializing in the
Pennsylvania hemp industry.
It's Time For Pennsylvania, And The County, To Join The Crowd On
Industrial Hemp
About 2 1/2 months ago Maryland became the fourth state to authorize
the cultivation of hemp. On July 1 Maryland became the third state to
actually plant hemp seeds. This important test crop is growing right
now.
Maryland now joins Hawaii, Minnesota and North Dakota as states that
have passed positive hemp legislation that will allow farmers to
cultivate hemp.
Nineteen other states have passed prohemp resolutions or have hemp
legislation either waiting to be passed, under consideration or are
undertaking studies on the economic potential of a revitalized hemp
industry. They include Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois,
Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Oregon, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin and
Pennsylvania.
Interest in hemp is intense and increasing. Hawaii planted hemp on Dec.
14,1999. There is hope that hemp will boost a sagging farm economy hurt
by the loss of sugar cane, formerly Hawaii's number one cash crop.
After passing positive hemp legislation in Minnesota last year, Gov.
Jesse Ventura gathered farmers together to instruct them on how to
apply for permits to grow hemp. He also wrote a letter to the Clinton
administration, formally requesting that the federal government remove
restrictions that prevent farmers from growing hemp right now.
Gov. Ed Schafer of North Dakota signed positive hemp legislation on
March 17, 1999. The people of that state watched and learned from their
neighbors across the border in Canada who have been successfully
cultivating and profiting from the newly revitalized and rapidly
expanding billion dollar hemp industry for half a decade now.
It is no wonder that North Dakota became the first state to pass
positive hemp legislation. Farmers there are poised to grow hemp,
especially for seed and oil as processing plants for flax seed oil
already exist in the area and can easily process hemp seed oil.
In addition, the Navajo Nation and the Oglala Lakota tribe have
announced intentions to grow hemp for self-sufficiency and as a boost
to local economies. The Oglala Lakota held a planting ceremony on April
29, the 132nd anniversary of the signing of the Fort Laramie Treaty.
The hemp harvested on the Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota
will be used to make hemp-based concrete that is lighter and easier to
work with than masonry concrete. It will be used as part of a building
project on Pine Ridge to address a severe housing shortage.
Here in Lancaster, interest in the cultivation, processing,
manufacturing and marketing of hemp has been shown by the Lancaster
Farm Bureau, individual members and Leaders of the Tobacco Marketing
Association, agricultural research firms and experimental farms, a
textile factory, bankers, agribusiness, township supervisors, a Kiwanis
club, a Rotary club, some political candidates and scores of farmers.
It has caught the, attention of the media, the Pennsylvania Department
of Agriculture, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, the Department of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology at Pennsylvania State
University, student activists at Millersville University and average
citizens.
Historical craftsmen are eager to work with locally grown hemp fibers.
There is a growing awareness of the historical significance of hemp in
Lancaster County.
In a forum on hemp held in Yoders Restaurant (of New Holland) in March,
Jean Laprise, an Ontario hemp farmer, pointed out that Lancaster County
would have a tremendous geographic advantage in marketing of hemp. We
are strategically placed in the center of a major population belt with
many industries that could make use of hemp raised here.
Already here in Lancaster County there are many businesses that either
import, produce or sell hemp foods, products and textiles. Hemp seed
and oil products are being sold In local grocery and health food
stores. The malls and other retail stores have carried hemp products
for years now. Profits from sales of hemp products locally as well as
nationally are projected to exceed all previous years.
Pennsylvania is the Keystone State. Our northeast corner borders a
major hemp growing region in Ontario where tens of thousands of acres
of hemp are cultivated yearly. The Maryland border graces Lancaster
County. We'll be able to see their hemp right up close. Are we to sit
idly by and just watch it grow?
The time to enact legislation that will allow our farmers to cultivate
industrial hemp is right now.
Les Stark, of Ephrata, is a researcher/historian specializing in the
Pennsylvania hemp industry.
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