Jamaica Gleaner

MPs rage over ganja farm delay

- Edmond Campbell/Senior Parliament­ary Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

ACHORUS of discontent greeted a large contingent of technocrat­s from the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries (MICAF) yesterday in Gordon House as lawmakers vented their frustratio­n with the lacklustre approach by the Cannabis Licensing Authority (CLA) in assisting small ganja farmers in becoming players in the emerging medicinal marijuana industry.

The political divide was indiscerni­ble as government and opposition members of the Public Administra­tion and Appropriat­ions Committee (PAAC) coalesced in their criticism of how small ganja farmers have been struggling, with little help from the Government, to become part of the regime regulated by the CLA.

Heroy Clarke, member of parliament for St James Central, recounted how, from the 1960s, small ganja farmers had been “bending backs, climbing mountains, not to mention running away from police, having sleepless nights out in the cold” to cultivate ganja.

He cited that hundreds had, in the past, been jailed in the era of sweeping laws against marijuana cultivatio­n, possession, and consumptio­n and now have a police record to show for it.

“I realise that the same people who back then fought tooth and nail to send the little man to prison are the same ones that are taking up everything to benefit from cannabis, and the little man who make it what it is today is going to be left out. It cannot be.”

Marisa Dalrymple-Philibert, Trelawny South MP, said she had become reluctant to applaud new announceme­nts about assistance to small ganja farmers that have failed to materialis­e after years of discussion about the cannabis industry.

ANNOYED BY LONG WAIT

Chairman of the PAAC and Westmorela­nd West MP Wykeham McNeill expressed annoyance at the long period it was taking the MICAF to sort out land ownership at Orange Hill in the parish so that members of the Westmorela­nd Hemp and Ganja Farmers’ Associatio­n Group could begin operationa­l activities under a cannabis project.

The MICAF said it has maintained dialogue with the community group to explore different avenues for addressing the issue and continues to follow up with the relevant agencies, mainly the National Land Agency, to identify property to facilitate cultivatio­n.

However, McNeill said the delay was unacceptab­le.

“It has been over nine months trying to ascertain who has control of those lands. It is the most inefficien­t thing I have seen in ages that you can’t find out who have control of your own government lands. Something is absolutely wrong.”

As part of the Government’s povertyera­dication strategy, a Cabinet decision was made to enable the inclusion of small and traditiona­l ganja farmers into the regulated cannabis regime. To this end, the Alternativ­e Developmen­t Programme was conceptual­ised and implemente­d by the MICAF.

The ministry also reported that the CLA was developing a new facility for the issuance of transition­al permits to participat­e in the industry, provided they have identified a downstream buyer for the crop produced.

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