Pubdate: Thu, 03 Mar 2016
Source: Mail Tribune, The (Medford, OR)
Copyright: 2016 The Mail Tribune
Contact:  http://www.mailtribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/642
Note: Only prints LTEs from within it's circulation area, 200 word count limit
Author: Shaun Hall, Grants Pass Daily Courier

BILL WILL ALLOW INDOOR HEMP GROWING

The bill, which clarifies several aspects of hemp cultivation in 
Oregon, now goes to Gov. Kate Brown

The Oregon Legislature has approved a bill to aid the state's 
fledgling hemp industry, including a local operation near Murphy.

The measure now goes to Gov. Kate Brown for her signature.

Among provisions in the bill, co-sponsored by Rep. Carl Wilson, 
R-Grants Pass, is one that addresses a concern that male hemp plants 
might cross-pollinate and harm the potency of nearby female marijuana plants.

The measure allows indoor and greenhouse growing of hemp plant 
"starts," which would allow growers to identify and destroy young 
male plants before they produce pollen and harm valuable female 
marijuana plants growing nearby.

The cross-pollination issue roused so much concern last year that a 
legislative effort was made - and defeated in the Oregon Senate - to 
temporarily bar hemp production in Oregon out of fear the male hemp 
plants would make neighboring female marijuana plants less potent. 
Female marijuana plants produce flowers that get people high when 
they're ingested or smoked, but the flowers are less potent when they 
have been pollinated by male plants.

Wilson took up the hemp cause at the urging of gubernatorial 
candidate and Grants Pass real estate agent Cliff Thomason, who is a 
partner with several others, including Josephine County Commissioners 
Cherryl Walker and Simon Hare, on a Murphy-based hemp production 
operation called Orehempco.

Thomason praised Wilson and his chief of staff, Michelle Binker, 
along with Portland lawyer Courtney Moran, a hemp specialist, for 
shepherding the bill through the Legislature.

"We're trying to create a whole new marketplace," Thomason said.

Wilson, Binker and Moran "did a fantastic job in a short session to 
make this a viable agricultural crop for this year," he said.

Orehempco employs six, plans to cultivate 15 acres on Walker's 
property near Murphy and cultivate another 25 acres near Sutherlin, 
with about 305,000 plants, about 5,000 of which will be for medicinal use.

Thomason valued each of the 5,000 medicinal plants at $1,000 each. 
Planting will begin in a few weeks. At harvest time, employment will 
jump to about 20 to 30, Thomason said.

Orehempco's crop last year was 90 percent damaged by deer, prompting 
the company to invest $15,000 in fencing, Thomason said.

Hemp's uses include fabric, food, paper, oils and cosmetics. It also 
can be used for building materials, including plywood, beams and 
building blocks.

Hemp production was allowed federally as of two years ago, with 
Oregon's first crop sown last year.

Nine industrial hemp producers attempted to grow a crop in the state 
last year, with three of those grows deemed failures, according to a 
legislative analysis.

Wilson issued a statement Monday announcing Friday's final passage of 
the bill, House Bill 4060, by a vote of 79-4. He touted the bill's 
provision allowing indoor growing.

"These expanded cultivation options promote co-existence by allowing 
hemp farmers to isolate or eliminate pollen-bearing plants, and to 
focus production on high-value products," Wilson said.

"Hemp is an amazing crop, with thousands of known uses," Wilson 
continued. "This is a great opportunity to bring the economic 
benefits of industrial hemp to rural Oregon. I'm tremendously excited 
by the possibilities of this product. Hemp is a winner for Oregon."

Thomason said current regulations prohibiting indoor hemp growing 
were an oversight that the new bill corrects.

Other provisions of the newly passed bill do away with a 2.5-acre 
minimum plot size - a help to small growers - and allow for 
state-approved lab testing of hemp that is to be used for human 
consumption. Thomason said he will now be able to have an outside lab 
test his product, rather than the state, saving him about $1,500.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom