Drug Policy activists gear-up against new DEA rule -- Oct 15, 2001

 

Fayetteville - Drug policy activists are gearing up to fight a new rule published in the Federal Register Oct 9 by the Drug Enforcement Agency, effective immediately, which regulates hemp seed products made for human consumption as a Schedule I drug. Public comments are accepted until December 10, 2001.

"This DEA action shows the absurd levels to which this agency will go to justify its continually increasing budget," stated Denele Campbell, Executive Director of Drug Policy Education Group, Inc., an Arkansas non-profit which educates on issues of drug policy. "No one could claim for a moment, not even the chemists at DEA, that anyone could be harmed by hemp seed products. This is a just a grab for more of our tax dollars."

Hemp is the non-intoxicating form of the Cannabis plant, grown legally in over 30 nations for its fiber and seed. Hemp contains less than one percent THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol), the primary intoxicating ingredient in Cannabis. Marijuana, considered akin to hemp in the way a St. Bernard is kin to a Chihuahua, contains from 3 percent up to 10 percent THC. DEA agrees that a person cannot become intoxicated from smoking hemp.

Hemp seed meal is an increasingly popular ingredient in a wide array of foods, including pretzels, beer, and nutritional foods. It contains proteins as complete as soybean protein, but in a more digestible form.  Hemp seed contains abundant oils which are high in essential fatty acids and which contain greater anti-oxidant properties than Vitamin E. Salad dressings and cooking oils are among the growing number of healthy foods made with the oil.

"I just spoke with a DEA representative who justified this action by claiming that hemp seed products could potentially cause a drug test to show positive. A person would have to ingest enormous quantities of hemp seed products in order to test positive," stated Ms. Campbell. "It's a sham excuse. I think the question we should be asking is whether drug testing is an effective method of ensuring public safety. And the answer is, no, it is not.

"A more effective method would be performance testing, where a person runs through a quick battery of automated tests at the beginning of each work day. This would screen out anyone impaired for any reason, and would be affordable for employers to use every day, unlike drug tests, which are so expensive they can only be administered occasionally. Of course, DEA doesn't like performance testing because their real agenda is to extend the government's intrusion into private lives by encouraging employers to function as de facto government agents."


"We'd like Arkansas farmers to profit from hemp crops. Right now the U.S. is importing over $500 million in raw hemp from foreign farmers. But this DEA action undercuts the market opportunities for domestic hemp, making it less profitable for our farmers. This is an end run around the growing demand to legalize hemp farming in this country."

"This is a also prime example of the absurdity of current U. S. drug policies. At one place in the proposed rule, DEA certifies that the
overall economic impact of this rule will be less than $100 million per year. Taxpayers are already fed up with the over $40 billion wasted annually enforcing a drug prohibition that doesn't work. Now we're supposed to be satisfied with a new rule that would feasibly cost us "only" $99,999,999 a year, all to regulate a substance that admittedly does not produce intoxication and does not have any dangerous health effects whatsoever," concluded Ms. Campbell. "My legislators will be hearing from me on this."

Public comments on the rule can be addressed to Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement Agency, Washington DC 20537, ATTN: DEA Federal Register Representative/CCD. For questions, call Frank Sapienza at DEA's Drug and Chemical Evaluation Section, 202-307-7183.

LINKS: 

Complete text of proposed rule available online in three documents at
www.hempreport.com/
 downloads/01-25022-filed.txt
 downloads/01-25023-filed.txt
 downloads/01-25024-filed.txt

See also Hemp at www.dpeg.org for a list of products made from hemp, a history of human use of the Cannabis plant, and for links to studies of hemp economics.