Hemp, Inc. Reports: Wisconsin Passes Senate Bill (SB) 119
Spring Hope, NC, Dec. 07, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hemp, Inc. (OTC PINK: HEMP) executives updated its shareholders today that Wisconsin Governor, Scott Walker, signed Senate Bill 119, that was adopted last month, into law and published on December 1, 2017. According to the Wisconsin State Legislature, Senate Bill (SB) 119 relates to “growing and processing industrial hemp, providing an exemption from emergency rule procedures, granting rule-making authority, making an appropriation, and providing a criminal penalty.” Senate Bill 119 will also allow a pilot program to be established in the state that will examine the cultivation, processing, and marketing of industrial hemp, and be administered by the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection (DATCP).
Today, Wisconsinites are aware of the need to diversify their state's economy. Enacting Senate Bill 119 into law was expected. Bruce Perlowin, CEO of Hemp, Inc. (OTC PINK: HEMP), said, "It's time for hemp to make its rightful return to the American landscape. Wisconsin was once a leading producer of industrial hemp and now the crop is set to make a return to the state of Wisconsin."
Senate Bill 119 states, in part, the following:
“…Requires the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to issue licenses that authorize the growing and processing of industrial hemp. The bill provides that a person may possess, transport, sell, distribute, or buy industrial hemp without a license if the industrial hemp was planted, grown, cultivated, and processed by a person licensed by DATCP or by a person in another state or country who planted, grew, cultivated, or processed the industrial hemp in accordance with the laws of that state or country. The bill requires reporting by a person with an industrial hemp license, including reporting all sales of industrial hemp.
This bill also provides that DATCP or an institution of higher education may establish an agricultural pilot program to study industrial hemp and to grow hemp for this purpose.
This bill requires DATCP, the University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (UW-CALS), and the Wisconsin Crop Improvement Association to administer a voluntary seed certification program for industrial hemp and allows DATCP and UW-CALS to develop a Wisconsin heritage seed for industrial hemp. In addition, the bill requires any industrial hemp or industrial hemp product intended for human consumption to be tested, in its final consumer-ready state, by an independent testing laboratory. The bill sets out requirements related to the laboratory's accreditation, testing, and reporting.
This bill also creates an exemption from the controlled substances law for growing, processing, or possessing industrial hemp in conformity with a license issued by DATCP. Additionally, the bill creates an exemption for possessing, transporting, delivering, selling, distributing, and buying industrial hemp if the industrial hemp was planted, grown, cultivated, and processed by a person licensed by DATCP or by a person in another state or country in accordance with the laws of that state or country.”
To read the full bill, click here.
According to the amended bill, the pilot program should move quickly, as DATCP only has 90 days to develop a system for licensing growers who will participate in the program. One news source, The Hempgazette, stated, “Given the constraints on industrial hemp in U.S. Federal law, there will be significant limitation on hemp farming in Wisconsin for the foreseeable future, however the framework of SB119 will enable expansion if things should change.
Wisconsin’s association with hemp began in 1908 with 6 acres of the crop. Its popularity grew rapidly and according to a 1918 report, Wisconsin was the second largest hemp producing state in the USA by 1917. Of the 42,000 acres of hemp grown in the United States that year, Wisconsin accounted for 7,000 acres. That same year, Kentucky had 17,000 acres under cultivation.”
Co-sponsor of SB119, State Senator Patrick Testin, sees a bright future for industrial hemp in Wisconsin. “We import about $500 million from Canada alone into the United States of industrial hemp,” he said. “This is a prime opportunity to lessen our dependence on foreign imports, and have those imports grown right here in Wisconsin.”
Hemp, Inc.’s investor relations department has also reported calls from at least 25 Wisconsin farmers wanting Hemp, Inc. to process their hemp. “We have seen an influx of calls from Wisconsin just over the past month. Industrial hemp is important to Americans because they are being informed on the difference between hemp and marijuana and the fog of ignorance is dissipating. Industrial hemp is a miracle crop and a big source of revenue,” concluded Perlowin.
Hemp, Inc.
(855) HEMP-OUT
info@hempinc.com
http://www.hempinc.com
For Investor Relations, please send correspondence to:
ir@hempinc.com
Source: Hemp, Inc.
© 2017 GlobeNewswire, Inc.
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ADVISORY: Secretary Perdue to Speak at National Press Club TOMORROW
(Washington, D.C., December 11, 2017) – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue will speak TOMORROW, Tuesday, December 12th at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The Secretary will deliver remarks about his recent travel around the country and offer his views on policy issues such as next year’s farm bill, deregulation efforts, and trade. Following the remarks, Secretary Perdue will participate in a question-and-answer session.
Secretary Perdue Delivers Remarks and Holds Q&A Session
WHAT: Secretary Perdue will address the National Press Club before participating in a question-and-answer session.
WHEN: TOMORROW, Tuesday, December 12th at 12:30 p.m. ET
WHERE: Holeman Lounge of the National Press Club, 529 14th St NW, Washington, D.C. 20045
*NOTE: Media interested in covering the event should RSVP to lunderwood@press.org by TOMORROW, December 12th, at 10:00 a.m. ET.
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DENVER—The Washington Post is reporting that a uranium mining company “launched a concerted lobbying campaign to scale back Bears Ears National Monument, saying such action would give it easier access to the area’s uranium deposits and help it operate a nearby processing mill.”
The story, which broke over the weekend, directly contradicts claims by the Trump administration that “this is not about energy.” The Center for Western Priorities issued the following statement from Deputy Director Greg Zimmerman:
“President Trump’s unprecedented and illegal attack on Bears Ears National Monument is just another in a long list of giveaways to special interests. A toxic history of failed uranium projects litters the southwest, especially on tribal lands. That President Trump and Secretary Zinke have the audacity to sell out Bears Ears, and its thousands of unique archeological sites, to a uranium extraction company is beyond the pale.”
The company, Energy Fuels Resources Inc. (EFR), has spent the last year lobbying the Trump administration to eliminate Bears Ears National Monument. It operates a uranium mill—White Mesa—and a uranium mine—Daneros mine—adjacent to Bears Ears National Monument.
In a May 2017 letter, Energy Fuels Resources wrote, “[We] respectfully request that DOI reduce the size of the BENM to only those specific areas or sites, if any, deemed to need additional protection beyond what is already available to Federal land management agencies." Its reasoning for eliminating Bears Ears was simple: there are “many known uranium and vanadium deposits located within the newly created [Bears Ears National Monument] that could provide valuable energy and mineral resources in the future."
The uranium mining company also hired a high-powered lobbying firm, FaegreBD, to carry its message into high-level officials at the Interior Department. According to a search in the U.S. Senate Lobbying Disclosure Act Database, Energy Fuels Resources—which has no past history of federal lobbying—paid $30,000 to FaegreBD to lobby on its behalf.
Lobbying for Energy Fuels Resources were two prominent Washington operators: Andrew Wheeler and Mary Bono. Wheeler, who was included on the account during Quarter 1 and Quarter 2, is a long-time coal industry lobbyist and has been nominated by Pre
Our Utah DC delegation has been so busy getting tax cuts to those that don’t need them collected from people who can’t afford to pay for them, that the delegation has let CHIP, healthcare for 58,410 Utah low-income children, EXPIRE! Read more
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Congressman Bishop, with a straight face says, “The idea that we’re going to give these over to oil and gas companies is a false narrative,” True Congressman, it is the COAL companies you are going to give this sacred land over to. Read more
“Sun-scorched desert mesa, 140 miles of it, lies between Lake Powell, the nation’s second-largest reservoir, and Utah’s Washington County, one of America’s driest metropolitan regions. It’s a long way in miles — but not insurmountable to the Washington County Water Conservancy District, which is charged with ensuring a rapidly growing desert community has water.” Read more
It's a sham. A trick. Spin. Congressman Stewart's pathetic plan to create a new Grand Staircase Escalante National Park. For 20 years the Monument protected 1.9 million acres. Trump came to Utah and cut it to 1 million acres. Now, Stewart has decided to go with 100,000ish acres in his 'Park'. This 'National Park' proposal is about paving Hole-in-the-Rock Road. It is also not a real Park--Stewart would redefine what a National Park is - with grazing, hunting, trapping, and all-state-politicians, all redneck management.
Stay Connected to Senator Jim Dabakis: Facebook | Twitter | Instagramsident Trump to serve as second-in-command at the Environmental Protection Agency. Mary Bono was a Republican member of Congress from 2003 through 2013, serving on the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
On July 17th, 2017, Andrew Wheeler, Mary Bono, and Paul Goranson, an executive at Energy Fuels Resources, met with high-level officials in the Interior Department, including Downey Magallanes, the architect of Secretary Zinke’s national monuments report, to “discuss the Bear Ears [sic] National Monument.”
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For more information, visit westernpriorities.org. To speak with an expert on public lands, contact Aaron Weiss at 720-279-0019 or aaron@westernpriorities.org.
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