Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey (R) on Wednesday signed into law a proposal to regulate consumable hemp products, the Alabama Reflector reports.
Sponsored by state Rep. Andy Whitt (R), the bill, HB 445, sets new testing and labeling requirements for consumable hemp products and bans the sale of smokable THC products, including vaporizers. Edible products, meanwhile, will be capped at 10 milligrams of THC per individually wrapped product and 40 milligrams per package. The proposal also imposes a 10% excise tax on consumable hemp products, and the state Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) Board will be tasked with licensing hemp companies. Only licensed companies, however, will be allowed to conduct retail consumable hemp sales.
Whitt told WSFA 12 News that the proposal stops short of legalizing cannabis but also doesn’t set an outright ban on hemp products, noting that “If you take gummies to help you sleep or help you with your arthritis or anxiety, you will still be able to go get these products but it’s not at your local gas station or convenience store.”
Hemp industry operators vehemently opposed the proposal and called on the governor to use her veto powers to protect the businesses and livelihoods of the Alabama hemp sector:
“I might have to close down and open a bar. The poison that is alcohol is legal whereas the plant that grows naturally out of the ground is not.” — Douglas Kennedy, owner of Montgomery’s The CBD Place, via WSFA 12 News
The Alabama Policy Institute, a conservative think tank, also opposed the policy, but for not going far enough to rein in the hemp market.
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