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The Maine Monitor: Working group recommends regulating intoxicating hemp


EXCERPT:


If you picked up a Long Coast non-alcoholic wild blueberry mojito, which contains hemp-derived THC and promises “all of the buzz, none of the hangover,” you’d experience intoxicating effects similar to those from a cannabis-infused drink.


But these hemp-derived products face none of the same regulations in Maine.

A state working group of health experts and industry producers is hoping to change that: they have recommended creating age limits for intoxicating hemp-derived products and putting a cap on the amount of THC in beverages in an attempt to regulate these products for the first time.


Hemp-derived products are regulated differently than recreational and medical cannabis because hemp plants contain a smaller concentration of THC.


However, as producers are increasingly figuring out how to concentrate that THC and use technology to derive different types of cannabinoids for highly potent products, states are racing to establish regulations. California last year passed an emergency ban on any hemp products with THC. 


“Now they have a much more potent product than was ever supposed to be allowed to be grown. And it’s perfectly legal to do anything you want to with it because there are no regulations around hemp the same way that there are rules around cannabis,” said Dr. Patty Locuratolo Hymanson, a physician and former chair of the Health and Human Service Committee who now sits on the Maine working group.


...


Last year, after recognizing “Maine law provides no mechanism for limiting access to intoxicating hemp-derived products,” lawmakers directed the Department of Agriculture Conservation and Forestry to form a working group and submit recommendations.


The group found that the lack of regulation “threatens public health and safety as well as the viability of Maine’s hemp industry,” according to a letter issued by the department on Nov. 1. “Hemp growers and processors recognize that accidental intoxications or other adverse impacts on Maine children and youth would be detrimental to growers and processors.”


Lapoint said he packages hemp-derived beverages for six different brands nationally and has been doing that for a little more than a year. He sells products to 12 states and they all have hemp regulations, he said.


“Right now it’s been state-by-state because the federal government hasn’t come up with anything,” Lapoint said. “I do think the federal government is entertaining it and looking at it pretty in depth (and) ultimately it will come there, but it takes longer for the federal government to move than for the state.”

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HempHoax.com is an educational and advocacy project of the San Diego/Imperial Counties Joint Labor Management Cannabis Committee.

 

General contact: hemphoax@gmailcom​

Media contact: Laura Braden

laura@onmessage.co

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