Pubdate: Tue, 18 May 1999 Source: United Press International Copyright: 1999 United Press International HEMP CAMPAIGN GAINS MOMENTUM Slowly, the campaign to allow U.S. farmers to grow industrial hemp again is making progress. North Dakota became the first state to pass and enact such authorization. Gov. Ed Schafer signed the measure April 19. Virginia and Hawaii also have passed similar legislation and bills are pending in Idaho, Illinois, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico and Vermont. In Wisconsin, the state Assembly's Agriculture Committee has held its first meeting on the proposal. That hearing was held primarily to let legislators hear the arguments on the issue. Law enforcement agencies in the state are opposing the idea because of hemp's identification with marijuana. Geof Kime, president of Hempline Inc., of Ontario, Canada, testified in the Wisconsin hearing by telephone. Canada has approved the production of hemp under government controls, and Kime said his organization is Canada's main producer of hemp fibers for textiles and paper. He said Hempline exports the majority of its fiber to the United States. Kemp said drug use has not been an issue in Canada because industrial hemp cannot be converted readily to the drug trade. (Thanks to E.W. Kieckhefer in Milwaukee) - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea