Chapter 441 |
2016 -- H 8232 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 07/12/2016 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY |
Introduced By: Representatives Melo, Bennett, McNamara, Corvese, and Tobon |
Date Introduced: May 19, 2016 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Title 2 of the General Laws entitled "AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY" |
is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
CHAPTER 26 |
HEMP GROWTH ACT |
2-26-1. Short title. -- This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Hemp |
Growth Act." |
2-26-2. Legislative findings. -- The general assembly finds and declares as follows: |
(1) The cannabis sativa plant used for the production of hemp is separate and distinct |
from forms of cannabis used to produce marijuana. |
(2) Hemp is used for products such as building materials, cloth, cordage, fiber, food, floor |
coverings, fuel, industrial chemicals, paint, paper, particle board, plastics, seed meal, seed oil, and |
yarn. |
(3) Industrial hemp production has remained legal throughout most of the world and |
hemp has the capacity to grow in a multitude of different climates, altitudes, soils, and weather |
conditions. |
(4) Currently, it is legal to import industrial hemp into the United States. |
(5) Although federal law currently prohibits the cultivation of hemp, the laws of |
California, Colorado, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, South |
Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia permit commercial hemp programs. |
(6) Currently, the United States is the largest importer of hemp products, the largest |
portion of which is imported from China. |
(7) States are not required to enforce federal law or prosecute people for engaging in |
activities prohibited by federal law. Therefore, compliance with this chapter does not put the state |
of Rhode Island in violation of federal law. |
2-26-3. Definitions. -- When used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the |
following meanings: |
(1) "Applicant" means any person, firm, corporation, or other legal entity who or that, on |
his, her, or its own behalf, or on behalf of another, has applied for permission to engage in any |
act or activity that is regulated under the provisions of this chapter. |
(2) "Department" means the department of business regulation. |
(3) "Division" means the division of agriculture in the department of environmental |
management. |
(4) "Grower" means a person or entity who or that produces hemp for commercial |
purposes. |
(5) "Handler" means a person or entity who or that produces hemp for processing into |
commodities, products, or agricultural hemp seed. |
(6) "Hemp" means the plant of the genus cannabis and any part of such plant, whether |
growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration that does not exceed three- |
tenths percent (0.3%) on a dry-weight basis of any part of the plant cannabis, or per volume or |
weight of marijuana product or the combined percent of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol and |
tetrahydrocannabinolic acid in any part of the plant cannabis regardless of the moisture content. |
Hemp is also commonly referred to in this context as "industrial hemp." |
(7) "Hemp products" means all products made from the plants, including, but not limited |
to, concentrated oil, cloth, cordage, fiber, food, fuel, paint, paper, construction materials, plastics, |
seed, seed meal, seed oil, and certified for cultivation. |
(8) "THC" means tetrahydrocannabinol, the principal psychoactive constituent of |
cannabis. |
(9) "THCA" means tetrahydrocannabinol acid. |
2-26-4. Hemp an agricultural product. -- Hemp is an agricultural product that may be |
grown as a crop, produced, possessed, distributed, and commercially traded pursuant to the |
provisions of this chapter. Hemp is subject to primary regulation by the department. The division |
may assist the department in the regulation of hemp growth and production. |
2-26-5. Authority over licensing and sales. -- (a) The department shall promulgate rules |
and regulations for the licensing and regulation of hemp growers and handlers or persons |
otherwise employed by the applicant and shall be responsible for the enforcement of such |
licensing and regulation. |
(b) All growers and handlers must have a hemp license issued by the department. |
(c) The application for a hemp license shall include, but not be limited to, the following: |
(1) The name and address of the applicant who will supervise, manage, or direct the |
growing and handling of hemp and the names and addresses of any person or entity partnering or |
providing consulting services regarding the growing or handling of hemp. |
(2) A certificate of analysis that the seeds or plants obtained for cultivation are of a type |
and variety that do not exceed the maximum concentration of delta-9 THC, as set forth in §2-26- |
3; any seeds that are obtained from a federal agency are presumed not to exceed the maximum |
concentration and do not require a certificate of analysis. |
(3) The location of the facility, including the Global Positioning System location, and |
other field reference information as may be required by the department with a tracking program |
and security layout to ensure that all hemp grown is tracked and monitored from seed to |
distribution outlets. |
(4) An explanation of the seed to sale tracking, cultivation method, extraction method, |
and certificate of analysis or certificate of analysis for the standard hemp seeds. |
(5) Verification, prior to planting any seed, that the plant to be grown is of a type and |
variety of hemp that will produce a delta-9 THC concentration of no more than three-tenths of |
one percent (0.3%) on a dry-weight basis. |
(6) Documentation that the licensee and/or its agents have entered into a purchase |
agreement with a hemp handler or processor. |
(7) All applicants: |
(i) Shall apply to the state police for a National Criminal Identification records check that |
shall include fingerprints submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Upon the discovery of |
a disqualifying conviction defined in paragraph (iv) and (v), and in accordance with the rules |
promulgated by the department, the state police shall inform the applicant, in writing, of the |
nature of the conviction, and the state police shall notify the department, in writing, without |
disclosing the nature of the conviction, that a conviction has been found; |
(ii) In those situations in which no conviction has been found, the state police shall |
inform the applicant and the department, in writing, of this fact; |
(iii) All applicants shall be responsible for any expense associated with the criminal |
background check with fingerprints. |
(iv) Any applicant who has been convicted of any felony offense under chapter 28 of title |
21, or any person who has been convicted of murder, manslaughter, first-degree sexual assault, |
second-degree sexual assault, first-degree child molestation, second-degree child molestation, |
kidnapping, first-degree arson, second-degree arson, mayhem, robbery, burglary, breaking and |
entering, assault with a dangerous weapon, or any assault and battery punishable as a felony or |
assault with intent to commit any offense punishable as a felony, shall be disqualified from |
holding any license or permit under this chapter. The department shall notify any applicant, in |
writing, for a denial of a license pursuant to this subsection. |
(v) For purposes of this section, "conviction" means, in addition to judgments of |
conviction entered by a court subsequent to a finding of guilty, or plea of guilty, those instances |
where the defendant has entered a plea of nolo contendere and has received a jail sentence or a |
suspended jail sentence, or those instances wherein the defendant has entered into a deferred |
sentence agreement with the Rhode Island attorney general and the period of deferment has not |
been completed. |
(8) Any other information as set forth in rules and regulations as required by the |
department. |
(d) All employees of the applicant shall register with the Rhode Island state police. |
(e) The department shall issue a hemp license to the applicant if he, she, or it meets the |
requirements of this chapter, upon the applicant paying a licensure fee of two thousand five |
hundred dollars ($2,500). Said license shall be renewed every two (2) years upon payment of a |
two thousand five hundred dollar ($2,500) renewal fee. Any licensee convicted of any |
disqualifying offense described in subsection (c)(7)(iv) shall have his, her, or its license revoked. |
All license fees shall be directed to the department to help defray the cost of enforcement. The |
department shall collect a nonrefundable application fee of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) for |
each application to obtain a license. |
2-26-6. Rulemaking authority. -- (a) The department shall adopt rules to provide for the |
implementation of this chapter, which shall include rules to require hemp to be tested during |
growth for THC levels and to require inspection of hemp during sowing, growing season, harvest, |
storage, and processing. Included in these rules should be a system requiring the licensee to |
submit crop samples to an approved testing facility, as determined by the department for testing |
and verification of compliance with the limits on delta-9 THC concentration. |
(b) The department shall not adopt under this or any other section, a rule that would |
prohibit a person or entity to grow or distribute hemp based on the legal status of hemp under |
federal law. |
2-26-7. Registration. – (a) Except as provided in this section, beginning sixty (60) days |
after the effective date of this chapter, the department shall accept the application for licensure to |
cultivate hemp submitted by the applicant. |
(b) A person or entity registered with the department pursuant to this chapter shall allow |
hemp crops, throughout sowing, year-long growing seasons, harvest storage, and processing, to |
be inspected and tested by and at the discretion of the department. |
2-26-8. Methods of extraction. -- (a) The department shall adopt rules regarding |
permissible methods of extraction. |
(b) No butane method of extraction shall be permitted by the department. |
2-26-9. Research and educational growth by institutions of higher education. – (a) |
The department is authorized to certify any higher educational institution in Rhode Island to grow |
or handle, or assist in growing or handling, industrial hemp for the purpose of agricultural or |
academic research where such higher educational institution submits the following to the |
department: |
(1) The location where the higher educational institution intends to grow or cultivate the |
industrial hemp; |
(2) The higher educational institution's research plan; and |
(3) The name of the employee of the higher educational institution who will supervise the |
hemp growth, cultivation, and research. |
(b) Growth for purposes of agricultural and educational research by a higher educational |
institution shall not be subject to the licensing requirements set forth in §2-26-5. |
(c) The applicant is encouraged to partner with an institution of higher learning within the |
state of Rhode Island to develop best practices for growing and handling hemp. |
(d) The department shall maintain a list of each higher education institution certified to |
grow or cultivate industrial hemp under this chapter. |
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2017. |
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LC005997/SUB A/3 |
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