Pubdate: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2007 Star Tribune Contact: http://www.startribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/266 Author: Chuck Haga, Star Tribune Cited: Vote Hemp http://www.votehemp.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/industrial+hemp INDUSTRIAL HEMP PRODUCER? PLAN RAISES FEDS' SUSPICIONS N.D. Farmer Says He Is Only Looking for a New Cash Crop. OSNABROCK, N.D. -- David Monson arrived at church the picture of rural conservative respectability, dressed in a suit and accompanied by his 79-year-old mother. Tall, neatly trimmed, attentive to neighbors as he escorted his mother to a pew, he is all you might expect and more: farmer, rural school superintendent, president of his Lutheran congregation, member of the Eagles, assistant Republican leader in the state House of Representatives. He also is on the radar of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, a hero of High Times Magazine. "He had to get fingerprinted," farmer Howard Hove said, laughing as he watched his friend mingle at church. "And a background check!" Monson, 56, wants to be the first U.S. farmer licensed to experiment with industrial hemp. Although it is a crop with a patriotic past, it is suspect now, guilty by association with its horticultural cousin, cannabis. Hemp has trace amounts of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the substance that makes marijuana a drug, and since 1970, the DEA has classified hemp -- with marijuana and heroin -- as a controlled substance. Monson farms 25 miles from Canada, where hemp acreage has grown sixfold since 2004 as Canadian farmers have tapped into new and growing markets for the scraggly, fibrous plant, which is used to make clothing, textiles, diapers, footwear, foods and other products. Monson wants to try growing it as an alternative to traditional crops plagued by disease or depressed prices. The advocacy group Vote Hemp estimates the U.S. hemp products business at $270 million and growing. But that business -- including the Minneapolis-based French Meadow Bakery, with its nationally marketed hemp-seed bread -- now depends on seeds and stalks imported from Canada and Europe, where hemp was rehabilitated in the 1990s. Ten years ago, Monson won legislative approval for research into hemp's potential as a cash crop in North Dakota. In 1999, the Legislature adopted his resolution urging Congress to unhitch marijuana and hemp, and the state set up a grower application process. This month, Monson was the first to apply. "I had to go up to my sheriff's office and get fingerprinted," he said. "That cost $2. Then I had to pay $52 to the state agriculture commissioner and $150 to the attorney general for a background check." That wasn't bad, he said. But the federal fees total $3,400 and are nonrefundable, and there's no guarantee the DEA will accept the application. North Dakota's agriculture commissioner, Roger Johnson, has asked the DEA to waive fees for all farmers seeking a hemp license. "We haven't heard back," Monson said. A Small Patch to Start Monson plans to raise hemp on only 10 acres at first, a demonstration crop, but under federal regulations, the acreage still must be completely fenced and reported by GPS coordinates. All hemp sales also must be reported. "That's a per-acre cost of about $400, and that would be prohibitive," Monson said. Hemp used to be a legal and valued crop in the United States. George Washington sang its praises, and during World War II, the federal government promoted its cultivation for the production of rope and other wartime needs. That's cool, the DEA says, but the agency fears legal hemp could lead to legal marijuana. Also, growers could hide pot plants in hemp fields, complicating agents' efforts to find them, said Tom Riley, of the White House Office on National Drug Control Policy. "You have legitimate farmers who want to experiment with a new crop," Riley said. "But you have another group, very enthusiastic, who want to allow cultivation of hemp because they believe it will lead to a de facto legalization of marijuana. "Why is High Times Magazine so enthusiastic about hemp? Because they care about fiber?" Drug gangs already cultivate marijuana on remote public lands in California, Riley said. "The last thing law-enforcement people need is for the cultivation of marijuana-looking plants to spread," he said. "Are we going to ask them to go through row by row, field by field, to distinguish between legal hemp and marijuana?" Hemp in Minnesota? Kevin Edberg, former head of marketing for the Minnesota Department of Agriculture, has tracked the status of industrial hemp for years and said there has been little movement recently to support its reintroduction here. But six other states have passed legislation and are poised to follow North Dakota's lead. California joined the parade last year, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill. When Monson's first hemp bills came before the North Dakota Legislature, hemp advocates from California arrived in Bismarck to testify. "They were mostly hippies," Monson said, smiling. "But some had roots in North Dakota, and they did a great job." He endured teasing: Was his farm going to pot? How was his weed control? But his neighbors and legislative colleagues understand that hemp could help save farms, he said, and that could sustain towns, schools, Main Street shops and churches. "In '93, we started having trouble with 'scab' in our wheat and barley, and it devastated us," Monson said. "Besides giving us another crop, this could mean new industry and jobs." Rope, Not Dope Jerry Lykken, handing out church bulletins last week, said he would consider adding hemp to his wheat, canola and corn. "I usually try all the new crops," he said. So might Hove, although "it's kind of spendy to get into it, with the fees and all," he said. James Robertson is skeptical, too. "I've seen them harvest hemp in Canada," the Osnabrock farmer said. "I've seen how tall it grows, up to eight or nine feet, and how lush it grows, making it a challenge to harvest. I think I'll let someone else try it first." That could be his friend Monson, who probably hasn't heard the last joke. "If it looks like marijuana, Dave might come home one night and find an acre missing," Robertson said, laughing. "Fence or no fence." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake