News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Yolo County Doesn't Want To Be Site Of Hemp Farms |
Title: | US CA: Yolo County Doesn't Want To Be Site Of Hemp Farms |
Published On: | 2011-07-25 |
Source: | Sacramento Bee (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2011-07-29 06:01:03 |
YOLO COUNTY DOESN'T WANT TO BE SITE OF HEMP FARMS
A bill that would allow industrial hemp farming in targeted areas of
California for the first time since World War II could be on Gov.
Jerry Brown's desk by September.
But Yolo County officials don't care to be among its
beneficiaries.
Under Senate Bill 676, Yolo would be one of five counties authorized
as areas for commercial farming of industrial hemp under an eight-year
pilot program. Industrial hemp is a source of fiber and oilseed used
in textiles, food and cosmetics.
The Yolo County Board of Supervisors, however, has asked the bill's
sponsor, Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, to remove Yolo from the
proposed legislation, said Chris Lee, a spokesman for the county's
intergovernmental affairs office.
Lee said the county's sheriff and district attorney were concerned
that law enforcement officers would have difficulty distinguishing
hemp, a non-psychoactive form of cannabis, from illegal marijuana
growing operations.
Leno said he will honor the county's request and plans to amend the
bill when it goes to the Assembly Appropriations Committee next month.
But, he said, "I'm disappointed that Yolo is not more
open-minded."
The board supported a 2007 bill, vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger,
that would have allowed industrial hemp farming statewide. Lee said
the supervisors had not taken a position on the current bill,
introduced in February, until they were notified in April that it had
been narrowed to focus on five counties Imperial, Kern, Kings, San
Joaquin and Yolo.
The county board membership has changed since 2007, Lee said, and the
Sheriff's Department's resources are strained with the loss of 10
deputy positions this year due to budget cuts.
Leno said he selected Yolo for the pilot program because of its
geographic location and weather, and because county supervisors had
supported the 2007 bill.
Hemp farms are easily distinguished from illegal marijuana grows, he
said.
"Hemp is planted in rows 6 inches apart; marijuana is planted 4 feet
apart," Leno said. "Hemp grows to be 20 feet tall, and marijuana is
about half that."
The bill has been endorsed by the Imperial County Farm Bureau, and
Leno said he has received letters of support from the Kings and Kern
county sheriffs.
Leno said he was sorry that Yolo's small family farmers would miss an
opportunity to benefit from a new crop.
Rachael Long, a farm adviser with UC Cooperative Extension in Yolo
County, said there is a developing market for hemp seed, particularly
in the health food industry, which currently imports hemp seed and oil
from Canada. In California, this might be prove profitable for small
farming operations of up to 20 acres, she said.
The Hemp Industries Association estimates that retail sales of hemp
food and body care products in the United States totaled $40.5 million
in 2010.
But Long said raising hemp for fiber is unlikely to be economically
viable in California.
"It takes a huge amount of water, and it's a low-value crop," she
said. "It's so much cheaper to produce in the Midwest, where rainfall
is plentiful."
Until hemp farming is legalized by the federal government, Long said,
farmers probably will be reluctant to grow the crop, even if
authorized by the state.
As a farm adviser, Long said, she obtained a few hemp seeds several
years ago for a test project only to suddenly find herself the target
of federal drug enforcement agents.
"It was so scary, it really was," she said.
Federal legislation HR 1831, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2011
has been introduced in Congress by Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas. It would
amend the federal Controlled Substances Act to exclude industrial hemp
from the definition of marijuana. The bill's co-sponsors include
California Reps. Tom McClintock, R-Elk Grove, and George Miller,
D-Martinez.
A bill that would allow industrial hemp farming in targeted areas of
California for the first time since World War II could be on Gov.
Jerry Brown's desk by September.
But Yolo County officials don't care to be among its
beneficiaries.
Under Senate Bill 676, Yolo would be one of five counties authorized
as areas for commercial farming of industrial hemp under an eight-year
pilot program. Industrial hemp is a source of fiber and oilseed used
in textiles, food and cosmetics.
The Yolo County Board of Supervisors, however, has asked the bill's
sponsor, Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, to remove Yolo from the
proposed legislation, said Chris Lee, a spokesman for the county's
intergovernmental affairs office.
Lee said the county's sheriff and district attorney were concerned
that law enforcement officers would have difficulty distinguishing
hemp, a non-psychoactive form of cannabis, from illegal marijuana
growing operations.
Leno said he will honor the county's request and plans to amend the
bill when it goes to the Assembly Appropriations Committee next month.
But, he said, "I'm disappointed that Yolo is not more
open-minded."
The board supported a 2007 bill, vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger,
that would have allowed industrial hemp farming statewide. Lee said
the supervisors had not taken a position on the current bill,
introduced in February, until they were notified in April that it had
been narrowed to focus on five counties Imperial, Kern, Kings, San
Joaquin and Yolo.
The county board membership has changed since 2007, Lee said, and the
Sheriff's Department's resources are strained with the loss of 10
deputy positions this year due to budget cuts.
Leno said he selected Yolo for the pilot program because of its
geographic location and weather, and because county supervisors had
supported the 2007 bill.
Hemp farms are easily distinguished from illegal marijuana grows, he
said.
"Hemp is planted in rows 6 inches apart; marijuana is planted 4 feet
apart," Leno said. "Hemp grows to be 20 feet tall, and marijuana is
about half that."
The bill has been endorsed by the Imperial County Farm Bureau, and
Leno said he has received letters of support from the Kings and Kern
county sheriffs.
Leno said he was sorry that Yolo's small family farmers would miss an
opportunity to benefit from a new crop.
Rachael Long, a farm adviser with UC Cooperative Extension in Yolo
County, said there is a developing market for hemp seed, particularly
in the health food industry, which currently imports hemp seed and oil
from Canada. In California, this might be prove profitable for small
farming operations of up to 20 acres, she said.
The Hemp Industries Association estimates that retail sales of hemp
food and body care products in the United States totaled $40.5 million
in 2010.
But Long said raising hemp for fiber is unlikely to be economically
viable in California.
"It takes a huge amount of water, and it's a low-value crop," she
said. "It's so much cheaper to produce in the Midwest, where rainfall
is plentiful."
Until hemp farming is legalized by the federal government, Long said,
farmers probably will be reluctant to grow the crop, even if
authorized by the state.
As a farm adviser, Long said, she obtained a few hemp seeds several
years ago for a test project only to suddenly find herself the target
of federal drug enforcement agents.
"It was so scary, it really was," she said.
Federal legislation HR 1831, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2011
has been introduced in Congress by Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas. It would
amend the federal Controlled Substances Act to exclude industrial hemp
from the definition of marijuana. The bill's co-sponsors include
California Reps. Tom McClintock, R-Elk Grove, and George Miller,
D-Martinez.
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