Pubdate: Thu, 06 Dec 2001 Source: Shepherd Express (WI) Copyright: 2001 Alternative Publications Inc. Contact: http://www.shepherd-express.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/414 Author: Geoff Davidian HEMP FOOD BAN HITS HERE The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has passed new administrative rules that prohibit eating certain health foods made with anything coming from the hemp plant. On Feb. 6, it will be illegal to sell or import hemp-containing foods, under a new rule of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The foods are being banned for import or sale because they contain traces of THC, the primary active constituent of marijuana. That being the case, healthful products like Hemp Nuggets (hulled hemp seeds), imported legally from Canada, and the Nutiva Organic Bar, containing the soon-to-be-illegal mix of sunflower seeds, honey, shelled hempseeds, flax seeds, pumpkin seeds and, possibly, traces of peanut, will be removed from shelves or retailers will face criminal prosecution. At Outpost Natural Foods, 100 E. Capitol Drive, hemp-bearing items are being put on sale to reduce stock before the deadline. But employees were not sure which products were banned. Hemp producers may be healthy, but they're not wimps. Several hemp food products manufacturers and the Hemp Industry Association, their trade group, have asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for an emergency stay of the rule's enforcement while they seek a formal review of the hemp ban. Federal appeals courts are the designated forum for challenging agency rule-making actions. "The DEA has given the manufacturers and retailers of consumable hemp products until Feb. 6 to dispose of their inventory-a situation which they assert will ruin their businesses. They say that their products are no more harmful than poppy seed bagels, which contain tiny trace amounts of opiate compounds, or fruit juices, which contain traces of alcohol," writes Michael Ravnitzky in the Dec. 3 issue of National Law Journal. Products on the market that the DEA says are affected by the action include some beers, cheeses, coffees, corn chips, energy drinks, flours, ice creams, snack bars, salad oils, sodas and veggie burgers. Manufacturers say that there is no measurable THC content in these foods under tests available when Congress passed the Controlled Substances Act. Suppliers say hemp is used in food products because the seeds are a high-quality source of protein, and the hemp seed oil contains a variety of heart-healthy essential fatty acids not found in other food products. "Our industry is seeing industrial hemp take off," says David Bronner, whose family uses hemp to make Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps. The firm's vice president is Ralph Bronner, who lives in Menomonee Falls. "Right now, food is the only issue," says Bronner, president. But can clothes, rope or soap be far off? "We feel industrial hemp has a lot of potential for fuel as an alternative to petrochemicals," he tells Shepherd Express. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart