Pubdate: Tue, 11 Dec 2001 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Website: http://www.ctnow.com/ Feedback: http://www.hartfordcourant.com/staff/letters.stm Address: 285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115 Contact: 2001 The Hartford Courant Fax: (860) 520-6941 Author: William Weir Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hemp.htm (Hemp) LET THEM EAT HEMP? Plan To Make Food Containing It Illegal Draws Protest MIDDLETOWN -- Earlier this week, a group of Wesleyan University students handed out pretzels to passersby in front of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration office in Hartford. Though tasty and nutritious, those "hemp seed pretzels" could soon become a controlled substance in the same category as marijuana and heroin, should a DEA proposal go through as planned, said student Booth Haley. According to the proposal, any business or individual in possession of a hemp food product that bears even trace amounts of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, after Feb. 6 would be in violation of laws that prohibit possession of a "schedule I controlled substance," a classification that includes marijuana and heroin. THC is the chemical that gives marijuana its hallucinatory effects. The agency is allowing a 120-day grace period for businesses to rid their inventories of the products. The DEA announced the change Oct. 9. Technically, the regulation would not be a new law, but a new interpretation of existing ones regarding marijuana. Spokeswoman Rogene Waite said it could be changed by Feb. 6. The Wesleyan students' demonstration was one of several in the nation organized by a national organization called Students for a Sensible Drug Policy. Opponents of the proposal say the hemp part of the cannabis plant contains so little THC that it would be virtually impossible to get high off any product that uses it. Haley said banning hemp products based on their level of THC is like banning poppy seeds for their trace amounts of opiates. Many speculate that the new interpretation is due to the complications hemp products cause in drug testing. Often, people who test positive for marijuana claim they had recently ingested a hemp food product. The DEA says that it is simply staying consistent in regard to its drug laws. Hemp products on the market include pasta, waffles, bread, snack bars and hemp nut butter, which are sold at several health food stores in the state. At Earth Balance in Simsbury, owner Kathy Pianka extolled the virtues of hemp, calling it a "complete food" high in protein and essential fatty acids. She said her own hemp-based products have proven popular. Pianka said she thinks the main reason for the proposal is that people just don't know enough about hemp. "I think there's a big misconception that it's just like marijuana," she said. Although the proposal would have a significant effect on the hemp industry nationwide, she said, it would make only a small dent in her business. Exactly how these new rules will play out is unclear at this point, said DEA spokesman Tom Hinojosa. While businesses selling these products would clearly be in violation, he said, the case of an individual in possession of one is a "gray area." Ultimately, he said, it will be up to the U.S. attorney's office and Department of Justice to decide how to prosecute these cases. "I don't think a cop's going to stop you on the street and say, 'Hey, what's in the pasta?'" he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth