Pubdate: Tue, 9 Mar 1999 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 1999 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: 424 W. First St., Duluth, MN 55802 Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?duluth Website: http://www.duluthnews.com/ Author: Rochelle Olson, Associated Press SENATE GIVES PRELIMINARY APPROVAL TO LEGALIZED HEMP PRODUCTION ST. PAUL -- Legalized hemp production by Minnesota farmers won preliminary approval in the state Senate on Monday. The bill would require hemp farmers to register and check in annually with the state and federal government and to disclose the names of the buyers or distributors of the crop. Growing hemp, a cousin to marijuana, is illegal in Minnesota but permitted in Canada. Senate Majority Leader Roger Moe, DFL-Erskine, said that unlike marijuana, industrial hemp contains virtually no tetrahydrocannabinol, known as THC. That is what makes marijuana a potent plant for those who smoke its leaves and buds. ``You'd get sick if you smoked (hemp) before you'd ever get high,'' said Moe, who sponsored the bill this year and last. Moe said hemp would be a good crop because it is used in a variety of products from fertilizer to carpet, cosmetics and car dashboards. Moe said hemp is grown in 22 countries, and more than 210 companies worldwide use it in products. ``Industrial hemp should be considered an alternative crop. It's certainly not going to replace the mainstays of agriculture,'' Moe said. Two farmers in the Senate backed the bill. Sen. Kenric Scheevel, R-Preston, said hemp is ``even more versatile than soybeans.'' ``I've been pleasantly surprised with the amount of support in the agriculture industry,'' Scheevel said. Last year, Gov. Arne Carlson vetoed a bill to allow experimental hemp growth. He said the plant would create problems for law enforcement officials because it is impossible to distinguish hemp from illegal marijuana plants. But Sen. Charlie Berg, an independent and farmer from Chokio, said hemp already grows naturally in the wild. He said the THC levels in the plant are so low that if one smoked it, one would feel nothing. ``I don't think there's going to be any dire results,'' Berg said of legalized hemp. Although Gov. Jesse Ventura has said he supports hemp production, Public Safety Commissioner Charlie Weaver said he had law enforcement concerns because to the naked eye, marijuana is indistinguishable from hemp. ``The growing of marijuana remains a significant law enforcement concern,'' Weaver said. If the bill became law, hemp growers would be allowed to set up experimental and demonstration plots. They would have to register with the state Department of Agriculture commissioner and with the U.S. attorney general. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake