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The Hemp Farming Act of 2018 was a proposed law to remove hemp (defined as cannabis with less than 0.3% THC) from Schedule I controlled substances and making it an ordinary agricultural commodity. Its provisions were incorporated in the 2018 United States farm bill that became law on December 20, 2018.
On December 20, 2018, the 2018 United States farm bill was signed into law, legalizing the cultivation of hemp containing less than 0.3% THC at the federal level. An unintended consequence of the bill was that it also legalized at the federal level the production of delta-8-THC , an isomer of THC with similar psychoactive effects.
It would remove industrial hemp from the state's legal definition of a drug, and put it under regulation by the state Department of Agriculture. [30] The bill passed the state House of Representatives 106–3 on May 25. [31] Iowa The Iowa state Senate passed File 2398, the "Iowa Industrial Hemp Act", 49–0 on April 4. [32] Kansas
"The Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018 seemed clear at the time in its intentions—reintroducing industrial hemp as an agricultural commodity, while maintaining existing federal prohibitions ...
In separate developments, the federal farm bill passed in 2018 took hemp, a type of cannabis plant with comparatively low concentrations of THC, off a list of controlled substances, opening the ...
The confusion can be traced back to the Agriculture Improvement Act, also known as the farm bill, which legalized hemp at the federal level in 2018. Since then, manufacturers have saturated the ...
The 2018 United States farm bill descheduled some cannabis products from the Controlled Substances Act for the first time. [ 90 ] [ 91 ] [ 92 ] In May 2019, A federal appeals court has re-instated a case against the federal government over the Schedule I status of cannabis.
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