Pubdate: Sat, 29 Jan 2000 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/LondonFreePress/home.html Forum: http://www.lfpress.com/londoncalling/SelectForum.asp Author: Larry Cornies Note: Larry Cornies is Forum editor for The London Free Press. His column appears Saturdays. He can be e-mailed at Letters to the editor should be sent to U.S. HAS HEMP INDUSTRY AT END OF ITS ROPE When two London-area hemp processing companies opened their doors and began signing contracts with growers two years ago, they expected a few bumps along the road. They knew there'd be the day-to-day snafus that come with launching any new business. There'd be law enforcement and Canadian government agencies to deal with, such as Health Canada, given the novelty of their raw material and the requirement that the plants they accepted from growers -- as well as the products they shipped -- were virtually free of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. And there'd be the job of proving to skeptics that hemp could again be a versatile, viable product in the international marketplace -- a marketplace it would take time to build. What they didn't count on was the flip-flopping they've seen by a variety of regulatory and enforcement agencies in the United States over the past six months on what's legal for import into America and what's not. The waffling has produced a big migraine for one of the two firms: Chatham-Kent processor Kenex Ltd., which manufactures hemp fibre and seed products. Last year, Kenex and another firm, Delaware-based Hempline Inc., contracted for about 1,200 hectares of various varieties of hemp to be grown in southern Ontario -- and there are far more growers willing to plant the crop than what the two firms have acreage for. Agronomists check the growing plants in mid-summer to ensure they don't exceed the 10-parts-per-million threshold for THC set by Health Canada. Testers with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency also do spot checks of fields. Once the fibrous stalks are harvested, processors such as Kenex and Hempline turn it into a wide range of fibre products, seeds, meal and oils, which eventually make their way into auto parts, textiles, animal bedding, carpets, bird seed and food. In order for the products to enter the U.S., they must meet strict standards for THC content. Following last summer's ideal growing conditions -- plenty of heat, with periodic rains -- growers took in a bumper crop. Kenex and Hempline cranked up production and began shipping to both domestic and foreign markets. The THC in the hemp plant is produced in its flowers. If the resin produced by the plant isn't completely cleaned off its seeds, those seeds can be contaminated with trace amounts of THC. Processors such as Hempline, which deal only with the stalks of certain hemp varieties, have had no problems with shipments, says company president Geof Kime. For Kenex, however, it's been a different story, characterized by a kind of moving target for THC levels. Late last summer, officials south of the border began to get jumpy. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) stopped an 18,000-kilogram Kenex shipment at the border and ordered the company to recall more than a dozen additional loads, claiming trace THC levels violated the 0.3-per-cent limit spelled out in trade agreements. The DEA also threatened the Pain Court company with penalties of $700,000. Kenex president Jean Laprise says the "seizure was clearly illegal (under) U.S. law," which spelled out tolerances for THC and the right of American companies to import the material, despite the fact it remains illegal to grow hemp in the U.S. Kenex was forced to stop shipping until the confusion was sorted out. The seized load, meanwhile, sat in the U.S. awaiting a decision. DEA and U.S. Customs eventually backed down, releasing the shipment and providing a verbal promise not to seize any future shipments of hemp products. A written agreement Dec. 7 outlined the criteria under which hemp shipments would be allowed into the U.S. Laprise says the deal was "very reasonable, by everyone's standards." Part of the agreement, Laprise says, was that Kenex had to waive whatever right it might have had to sue the U.S. government for its losses. Fine. Kenex agreed. Earlier this month, however, the deal was rescinded by the Office of National Drug Control Policy in Washington. It ordered U.S. Customs to issue a Jan. 5 memoradum which made all hemp products containing any measurable amount of THC subject to immediate seizure and confiscation. "It's the law that keeps changing from one agency to another -- the U.S. Justice Department, U.S. Customs, the DEA," Laprise says. U.S. importers, meanwhile, are claiming that according to the federal Controlled Substances Act, hemp seeds can be legally brought into the country as long as they are sterilized to prevent growth -- no matter how much residual THC they contain. At issue for both Canadian exporters and U.S. importers is the fact the industry is being hurt by policy changes which are constantly in a state of flux. More important, though, is the fact American enforcement agencies -- the DEA, U.S. Customs and the Office of National Drug Control Policy seem to have rewritten the law on their own three times over the past six months without ever involving the U.S. Congress, which, like Parliament in Canada, makes the laws that agencies then enforce. Laprise says his company is working with others in the industry to get Agriculture Canada and the Canadian embassy in Washington to iron out the wrinkles. And Canadian agriculture officials say they'll stand by their farmers and processors. But at the rate American enforcement agencies are rewriting the rules, it's best to move quickly, before operations like Kenex go up in smoke. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst