Source: therepublic.com
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack speaks to members of the media
about the upcoming wildfire
season, during a news conference at the
History Colorado Center, in Denver, Tuesday, May 20, 2014.
The U.S.
Forest Service says it is adding four aircraft to its firefighting fleet
as California recovers from
a spate of blazes and other fire-prone
states brace for another hot, dry summer.(AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
DENVER
— Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Tuesday he's working with the
Department of Justice to permit the importation of hemp seeds for
cultivation.
The farm bill signed into law by President Obama allows the industrial production of hemp, marijuana's non-intoxicating cousin. But
the federal government has effectively prevented the two states that
want to grow the crop from obtaining seeds to start production.
Kentucky has sued the federal government to force it to release hemp
seeds. Colorado is waiting on Vilsack's go-ahead to get seeds from
Canada.
At a news conference in Denver on the upcoming wildfire
season, Vilsack said his agency is trying to resolve a conflict between
what the farm bill permits and what federal drug laws prohibit. "We're going to figure it out," he pledged, adding the
crop could be an "extraordinary income opportunity."
He said he's
discussed the issue with Attorney General Eric Holder and passed onto
him a law-review article that outlined one way the seeds could legally
get to the states.
Hemp is the non-intoxicating agricultural cousin of
marijuana. Recreational use of that drug is legal in Colorado and
Washington state but still banned under federal law.
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