Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jul 2001
Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Copyright: 2001 The Salt Lake Tribune
Contact:  http://www.sltrib.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/383
Author: Steven Oberbeck,

HOPPED UP OVER HEMP

Selena Kontuly swears she has never gotten high using lip balm, shampooing 
her hair or rubbing herself down with scented body butter.

The Drug Enforcement Administration, though, takes a different view of the 
products Kontuly pushes as manager of The Body Shop skin- and hair-care 
store at Crossroads Plaza in downtown Salt Lake City.

The reason? Some of the personal-care items The Body Shop carries are made 
with hemp-seed oil that contains trace amounts of THC, the psychoactive 
ingredient in marijuana.

And while The Body Shop's products are legal, the DEA in May indicated it 
is considering new regulations that will interpret existing drug laws to 
prohibit any product that allows THC to enter the body, no matter how small 
the amount, said Chad Little, spokesman for The Body Shop USA.

Hemp has a bad reputation because it is related to marijuana, but marijuana 
and hemp are two different varieties of the cannabis plant, Kontuly said.

"You'd have to smoke a joint the size of a telephone pole to get high on hemp."

On Thursday, The Body Shop USA launched a nationwide "Save Hemp" campaign 
at its 285 stores in the United States. The company's Utah stores at 
Crossroads Plaza and Fashion Place Mall in Murray are participating in the 
campaign.

Hemp-oil products account for $5 million in sales at The Body Shop USA and 
about 5 percent of the nearly $1 billion in annual sales generated by its 
parent company based in Britain. The company does not want to lose that 
revenue.

Nor does it want customers to lose access to what The Body Shop says are 
good products.

Hemp oil is a moisturizer that contains the same fatty acid found in skin 
and hair, Kontuly said. "It is easily absorbed and while you cannot get 
high, it does make your skin and hair happy."

Hemp has a history as an agricultural product in the United States, 
according to Richard Adams, author of The U.S. Hemp Market: An Economic 
Examination of the Hemp Industry.

George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams cultivated the 
versatile plants that today can be used in products that include fabrics 
and food, packaging and pasta.

"Indeed, so common was the use of hemp during the era that the first two 
drafts of the Declaration of Independence and the final version of the 
Constitution of the United States of America were, in fact, printed on 
paper made from hemp," Richard Adams wrote.

Hemp production was banned under the Marijuana Tax Act of 1938 because it 
is essentially the same plant as marijuana. With only a few exceptions, all 
industrial production of hemp in the United States is illegal.

However, hemp can be imported into the United States as a raw material or 
as an ingredient in finished products.

The hemp oil The Body Shop uses in its products is made in Canada.

The DEA's position is that all cannabis plants -- including those grown for 
industrial use -- contain THC, which is a hallucinogenic substance outlawed 
under the federal Controlled Substances Act.

"The drafted regulations focus on whether the particular cannabis-derived 
'hemp' product causes THC to enter the body," according to a DEA fact sheet 
released by the agency's Salt Lake City office. "If so, the product will 
remain a Schedule 1 controlled substance."

If, however, use of the product (such as in paper or clothing) does not 
cause THC to enter the human body, the product will be exempt from control 
and not subject to any of the regulations that apply to controlled 
substances, it said.
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MAP posted-by: Beth