We’ve been closely following the trajectory of SB 1409 and on September 30, 2018, Governor Brown signed the bill which will go into effect on January 1, 2019. This legislation is a huge step for California cannabis, in that it will add an industrial hemp pilot program to the California Department of Food and Agriculture’s registration system.

Currently, California law regulates the cultivation of industrial hemp, and specifies certain procedures and requirements on cultivators, not including an established agricultural research institution. Existing law defines “industrial hemp,” via the California Uniform Controlled Substances Act, as a fiber or oilseed crop, or both, that is limited to the non-psychoactive types of the plant Cannabis sativa L. and the seed produced from that plant.

Existing California law also requires that industrial hemp only be grown by those on the list of approved hemp seed cultivars. That list includes only hemp seed cultivars certified on or before January 1, 2013. Industrial hemp may only be grown as a densely planted fiber or oilseed crop, or both, in minimum acreages. Growers of industrial hemp and seed breeders must register with the county agricultural commissioner and pay a registration and/or renewal fee.

SB 1409 deletes the exclusionary requirement that industrial hemp seed cultivars be certified on or before January 1, 2013. Additionally, “industrial hemp” will no longer be defined restrictively in the California Uniform Controlled Substances Act as a fiber or oilseed crop, and the bill deletes the requirement that industrial hemp be grown as a fiber or oilseed crop, or both. We initially presumed this would allow cultivators to harvest hemp for CBD derivation, and related use, but given the recent FAQ issued by the California Department of Public Health effectively banning the sale of CBD food products, how hemp-derived CBD in California will be regulated in the future remains to be seen. We are certain this is an issue that will be taken up by the state during the rule-making process.

SB 1409 also authorizes the state Department of Food and Agriculture to carry out, pursuant to the federal Agricultural Act of 2014, an agricultural pilot program for industrial hemp. Twinning a state-sanctioned pilot program with licensed, private cultivation is a model that has worked well in other states, like Colorado and Oregon. Given the recent expiration of the 2014 Farm Bill prior to passage of the Hemp Farming Act of 2018, however, it remains to be seen how new hemp pilot programs will be viewed and treated by the federal government. Our hope is that Congress will resolve its differences and enact the Hemp Farming Act of 2018 before the end of the year, or at least before California is able to build out and implement its own regulatory system.

Some other provisions included in SB 1409 include detailed requirements for sampling and laboratory testing of industrial hemp. The bill provides new time frames for sampling of industrial hemp and destruction of hemp that exceeds the 0.3% THC limit. Also of note, and perhaps unfortunately, the bill adds a provision to the Food and Agricultural Code giving local jurisdictions the ability to ban industrial hemp cultivation in limited circumstances:

A city of county may, upon a finding that pollen adrift from industrial hemp crops may pose a threat to licensed cannabis cultivators permitted by the city or county, prohibit growers from conducting, or otherwise limit growers’ conduct of, industrial hemp cultivation in the city or county by local ordinance, regardless of whether growers meet, or are exempt from, requirements for registration pursuant to this division or any other law.”

We’ve seen recent litigation on this issue in Oregon, so perhaps the state is trying to insulate its licensees from similar outcomes.

As stated above, we’ll be very interested to see how (and if) regulators tackle the issue of industrial hemp-derived CBD in California as they develop the new regulatory framework for hemp. In the meantime, if you are unfamiliar with the current legal status of hemp-derived CBD food products in California, we recommend reading the CDPH’s FAQ and checking out our post on the topic here. We’ll continue to monitor rule development now that the bill has passed and all hemp-related developments in California closely.

For more on industrial hemp generally (including CBD), check out our wealth of archived posts here.