{"id":27303,"date":"2018-02-19T22:55:00","date_gmt":"2018-02-20T06:55:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/alaska-house-votes-to-legalize-hemp-farming\/"},"modified":"2018-02-19T22:55:00","modified_gmt":"2018-02-20T06:55:00","slug":"alaska-house-votes-to-legalize-hemp-farming","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-house-votes-to-legalize-hemp-farming\/","title":{"rendered":"Alaska House votes to legalize hemp farming"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Alaska House of Representatives has voted unanimously to legalize hemp farming in Alaska, a move that puts the 49th state on track to become the 35th in the country<\/a> to legalize cultivation of the non-intoxicating form of cannabis.<\/p>\n Senate Bill 6<\/a>, drafted by Sen. Shelley Hughes, R-Palmer, now returns to the Senate for a concurrence vote. That procedure is expected to be a formality, as is its approval by Gov. Bill Walker. (The Senate approved an earlier version of the bill 20-0 last year.)<\/p>\n “It’s not going to solve our fiscal gap and economic woes, but for a number of individuals, it will create new opportunities,” Hughes said after the votes were tallied.<\/p>\n She said she had just hung up the phone with former state Sen. Johnny Ellis, the longtime Democrat from Anchorage, who had introduced a similar measure in his final term of office.<\/p>\n “He’s been watching it, so that was kind of cool,” she said, and Ellis offered his own thoughts by Twitter, saying that it offers “freedom to farm.”<\/p>\n In the House, the bill was carried by Rep. Harriet Drummond, D-Anchorage, who said “the commercial possibilities of hemp are numerous and versatile.”<\/p>\n Rep. Dan Saddler, R-Eagle River, said that while he has concerns about the legalization of recreational marijuana, that’s not what this bill is about. SB 6 allows hemp with a THC content of 0.3 percent or less; at that concentration, Saddler said, you could smoke a ton of it and not get anything more than a sore throat and lungs.<\/p>\n Rep. Jason Grenn, I-Anchorage, pointed out that it was appropriate for the bill to be approved on Presidents’ Day because early presidents including George Washington and John Adams were hemp cultivators.<\/p>\n In addition to allowing the cultivation of hemp under a state license, SB 6 exempts hemp-derived CBD oil from the state’s marijuana regulations. In 2017, representatives of the Alaska Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office confiscated CBD oil<\/a> from marijuana retailers across the state, citing ambiguities in state law.<\/p>\n No vote on unemployment<\/p>\n