| For Immediate Release
Monday, August 21, 2006
CONTACT:
Patrick Goggin 415-312-0084
Tom Murphy 207-542-4998
Adam Eidinger 202-744-2671
adam@votehemp.com
California Hemp Bill Passes
Final Senate
and Assembly Votes
AB 1147 Heads to Governor's
Desk for Signature
SACRAMENTO, CA —
AB
1147, The California Industrial Hemp Farming Act,
passed its final vote in the Assembly today by a bipartisan
vote of 44-29. The bill now heads to Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger's desk for his signature. Since passing
out of the Assembly in January of this year, AB 1147
has gained momentum as legislators learned that California
businesses spend millions of dollars each year importing
hemp from Canada, China and Europe. Demand for hemp
products such as clothing, food, body care, paper and
even auto parts has been growing rapidly in recent years,
with the U.S. hemp market now exceeding an estimated
$270 million in annual retail sales. The new law would
give farmers the ability to legally supply U.S. manufacturers
with hemp seed, oil and fiber and would not weaken anti-drug
laws.
"We thank legislators from both parties
that listened to the facts about industrial hemp and
made an historic decision to bring back the crop,"
says Vote Hemp President Eric Steenstra. "Passage
in the California Legislature is a major accomplishment
for the authors and sponsors of the bill, as well as
for thousands of environmentally-conscious voters, farmers
and businesses who wrote California legislators,"
says Steenstra.
The California Industrial Hemp Farming
Act was introduced in February of 2005 by Democratic
Assemblyman Mark
Leno. This year, the bill was amended, and Republican
Assemblyman Chuck
Devore joined as co-author. In the bipartisan spirit
of the legislation, the bill was managed on the floor
of the Senate by Republican Tom
McClintock and received support from Senator Able
Maldonado, a farmer and Republican member of the
Senate Agriculture Committee. Another influential Republican
Senator who supported the bill was Sam
Aanestad, Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations
Committee. The support of Democratic Assemblymember
Barbara
Matthews, Chair of the Assembly Agriculture Committee,
also was key to the bill's passage.
AB 1147 has been carefully crafted to
comply with federal law and minimize impact to law enforcement.
It includes tough regulations without placing an undue
burden on farmers. The bill permits cultivation of only
ultra-low-THC industrial hemp grown as an agricultural
field crop or in a research setting. Backyard or horticultural
cultivation is prohibited. Any clandestine grove of
Cannabis will be considered a controlled substance
regardless of its THC content.
Vote Hemp believes the new law would
withstand federal scrutiny in the form of legal challenges
and ultimately will result in commercial hemp farming
in California. No industrial hemp is grown in the United
States today, even though seven
states have passed hemp farming and research bills
in recent years. More details on industrial hemp legislation
can be found at www.VoteHemp.com.
Final passage of AB 1147 could revitalize commercial
industrial hemp farming, which occurred in California
until shortly after World War II. "It appears the
hemp seed and oil we currently import soon will be grown
and produced right here in California," says David
Bronner, Chair of the Hemp Industries Association's
(HIA)
Food and Oil Committee and President of ALPSNACK/Dr.
Bronner's Magic Soaps. "The HIA's member companies
are urging Governor Schwarzenegger to support California's
farmers and natural products industry by signing the
industrial hemp bill. Double-digit sales growth over
the last few years in the hemp food and body care sectors
indicates strong consumer demand for hemp products that
will sustain high prices for farmers for years to come,"
he adds.
More information about industrial hemp
legislation and the crop's many uses may be found at
www.VoteHemp.com
and www.HempIndustries.org.
BETA SP or DVD Video News Release featuring footage
of hemp farming in other countries is available upon
request by contacting Adam Eidinger at 202-744-2671.
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