Industrial hemp champion Kelly Rippel wants to light a fire under state and federal lawmakers to reform the agricultural policy framework to better support cultivation of a crop farmed by seven U.S. presidents before the industry was dismantled across the country.
George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, Zachary Taylor and Franklin Pierce grew the tall, leafy plant. The emphasis wasn’t on the version of cannabis packed with the psychoactive component THC, but the incarnation useful in manufacturing rope, textiles, paper and other goods. In the United States, forces moved in the 1930s to restrain hemp production, and the 1970s war on drugs cleared it from domestic fields.
Rippel, cofounder of Kansans for Hemp, founding president of Planted Association of Kansas as well as a member of the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s hemp research advisory panel, said a tough learning curve for growers, inclement weather and the immature supply chain restrained producer interest in the crop.
In 2014, the national Farm Bill legalized hemp production for research purposes. The Farm Bill four years later removed hemp as a Schedule I drug and established it as an agricultural commodity with cultivation outside pilot projects. That law also restricting THC content of industrial hemp plants to less than 0.3% to be unsuitable for producing smoking marijuana. Kansas and more than 45 other states made hemp production legal.
Under the 2023 Farm Bill, there has been consideration of approving hemp seed for animal feed so it could become a more common rotational crop.
“There’s more of an embracing of the fact that ‘Hey, this actually does provide benefit to our communities,’” he said.
During this year’s session of the Kansas Legislature, House Bill 2168 failed to gain widespread traction in the House and Senate. It would have addressed the animal food question as well as concern about license fees and crop testing costs was opposed by the state Department of Agriculture. The agency didn’t want to get out ahead of federal hemp statute or guidance from the Association of American Feed Control Officials, which has guided ingredient definitions and laboratory standards for more than a century.
Rippel said production in Kansas of the hemp variety most useful for fiber and grain offered the best path to sustainable economic development.
Source: thepitchkc.com
Photo Credit: gettyimages-fatcamera
Categories: Kansas, Crops