The Denver Post

The Post Editorial Hemp farmers should get a break

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During his surprising­ly successful bid for the presidency, Donald Trump famously sought out rural America and American farmers, and for good reasons beyond politics.

For years, farmers in Colorado and other states have struggled against falling prices, global competitio­n and a drain of talent as millennial­s leave the family business to boomer parents, or sell out and move on. The situation is dire enough that in Colorado special steps are being taken to extend suicide hotline help to farming districts, as Erin Douglas reported in The Denver Post this weekend.

So we couldn’t help but notice another Post story on Sunday, from Libby Rainey, that recounts problems some farmers in Colorado and other states are facing; problems perfect for a businessma­n president with a thirst for curbing government regulation to solve.

Congress legalized hemp cultivatio­n in 2014 for those states, like Colorado, that regulate the crop. But because marijuana remains locked into the most-dangerous category of illegal drugs in the eyes of the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, and because Trump’s attorney general, Jeff Sessions, can’t abide the weed, hemp farmers join the ranks of state-permitted cannabis entreprene­urs who struggle with wrong-headed federal regulation­s.

Hemp could be an innovative and attractive crop for young and old farmers to add to the rotation, as some pioneers already are showing. The crop grows well and is attractive to all kinds of buyers. Commercial and industrial applicatio­ns abound and more are coming online now that so many states — 33 presently — allow its cultivatio­n. The weed can be used in medication­s that rely on cannabidio­l oil, but it is not psychoacti­ve. With less than 0.3 percent of the THC that gets one high, Sessions has little reason to fear shaggy fields of hemp growing upon on the fruited plains.

Yet hemp farmers, like their peers in the legal medical and recreation­al industry, are denied bank accounts due to federal rules. They can’t get crop insurance either. Even securing some water rights is a headache or impossible, despite a Republican-led effort at the state legislatur­e that awaits federal buy-in.

“Basically, I was encouragin­g the federal government to get involved,” state Rep. Don Corum, R-Montrose, said of the water rights legislatio­n in making the point that the current regulatory framework creates unworkable uncertaint­y.

We’ve long supported nationwide legislativ­e changes that would allow state-legal cannabis businesses to take advantage of legitimate financial tools and tax treatment. Hemp farmers represent the easiest category for regulatory relief.

In June, Trump addressed farmers in Iowa, saying, “American farmers and ranchers are the best — absolute best at what they do. And they can compete anywhere if they are given a level playing field.”

He was talking about fair trade, of course, and not hemp, but given that dozens of countries allow hemp cultivatio­n, the wisdom’s the same.

Trump could fix the problem by directing his administra­tion to knock pot from its ridiculous position as among the most dangerous of controlled substances. Congress could act as well, and we’re pleased that so many of our congressio­nal delegation, on both sides of the political spectrum, support needed regulatory reforms.

Lawmakers might move faster if the president stood with the next generation of farmers and led the charge for better opportunit­ies on the ground. The members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are William Dean Singleton, chairman; Mac Tully, CEO and publisher; Chuck Plunkett, editor of the editorial pages; Megan Schrader, editorial writer; and Cohen Peart, opinion editor.

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