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CFF is not a scam. Actually common practice in equities markets.
WHERE DO YOU THINK ALL THOSE ASSETS CAME FROM? THE SKY?
While all the mrnobodies try to figure out why public companies have shares to offer, HEMP PRODUCING AND PROCESSING thousands of acres of hemp, at the same time EDUCATING those who are interested in doing the same.
It is why we can see revenues continue to increase.
Where did you read HEMP was a share-dilution scheme?
Four takeaways from the latest round of federal CBD warning letters
Published September 12, 2019 | By Hemp Industry Daily staff
The young CBD industry is growing accustomed to federal health authorities warning companies not to make medical claims about the cannabinoid.
But a round of warning letters this week from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) – the consumer-protection agency that safeguards against unfair and deceptive advertising – served as a reminder that as CBD goes mainstream, more federal agencies are giving the industry a critical look.
This week’s FTC warnings went to three unidentified CBD companies. Among other complaints, the FTC criticized the businesses for:
--Posting on a website that CBD “works like magic.”
--Advertising CBD as a “miracle pain remedy.”
--Touting a CBD cream’s ability to relieve arthritis pain.
--Using a partnership with Harvard University researchers to bolster claims that CBD has been “clinically proven to treat cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, cigarette addiction and colitis.”
The companies were given 15 days to review all claims and product testimonials and ensure they are backed by scientific research.
Like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the FTC can fine companies that make unproven medical claims, though enforcement actions beyond warning letters are rare.
To find out what lessons the broader CBD industry should take from the FTC warnings, Hemp Industry Daily talked with industry insiders and lawyers. Here are their top takeaways:
1. They’re watching: This week’s letters from the FTC were not the agency’s first foray into checking CBD manufacturers for deceptive business practices.
But the FTC has been much less vigorous than the FDA when it comes to cannabinoid products. This week’s letters show the CBD industry is maturing and getting attention from more federal agencies, said Samantha Walsh, a Denver-based hemp lobbyist and CEO of Tetra Public Affairs.
Every federal warning “counters the myth that hemp isn’t regulated,” she said. “It clearly is.”
And the FTC warnings are a sign that more federal authorities acknowledge the growth of the CBD industry, said Rod Kight, a cannabis attorney in Asheville, North Carolina.
“The FTC has fully entered the CBD regulatory space, and we can expect to hear more from it during the coming months,” Kight wrote in an email to Hemp Industry Daily.
2. Worry first about the FDA: The FTC letters underscore broader government interest in the new CBD industry.
But the FDA “is still the 800-pound gorilla in the room,” according to Andrew Subin, an attorney who started Vermont Cannabis Solutions in Burlington, Vermont.
While the FTC can issue fines, he said, the FDA can take products off shelves.
“The FDA regulations will govern what can go into the package and what needs to be included on the outside of the package,” Subin wrote in an email.
“The FTC will, presumably, allow people to advertise the claims that the FDA allows them to make (if any). So what we are really still waiting for is some regulations from the FDA.”
3. Have a compliance plan: User testimonials and influencer posts on Instagram can land a company in hot water if the product manufacturer highlights the content or has contracts for the posts, said Emily Leongini, a Washington DC-based attorney at the Arent Fox law firm who advises cannabis clients.
Because of that, savvy CBD companies should have formal procedures to ensure its social media and marketing plans comply with federal guidelines.
“This needs to be top of mind,” Leongini said. “Your marketing team or your compliance team needs to be familiar with what the FDA and FTC are saying and then implement those guidelines.”
4. Constant surveillance isn’t necessary: Garrett Graff, a Denver attorney who advises CBD manufacturers with the Hoban Law Group, said producers need to be vigilant about monitoring claims being made about their products.
But that doesn’t mean federal agencies expect instant compliance, especially from user-generated content the company itself didn’t write.
“You don’t have to be scrubbing all your sites on a full-time basis,” Graff said.
Instead, have a plan to review medical claims “in a timely manner.”
Source: https://hempindustrydaily.com/takeaways-from-the-latest-round-of-federal-cbd-warning-letters/
Sources: USDA hemp rules drafted and awaiting White House approval
Published 9/13/19 | By Laura Drotleff
Federal agriculture authorities have submitted hemp rules to the White House for final approval, meaning that public release of the first-ever national rules for growing the crop is nearing, Hemp Industry Daily has learned.
The hemp industry is eagerly – and anxiously – awaiting federal regulations on hemp production from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Those rules have been promised by the 2020 growing season.
According to Washington DC-based cannabis attorney Jonathan Havens and the National Hemp Association, the USDA has completed the rules and submitted them for review to the White House Office of Budget and Management, which reviews all regulations adopted and implemented by a presidential administration.
This means once approved, the USDA regulations will likely be released within a matter of weeks.
“Obviously, this is later than USDA’s August publication goal,” Havens told Hemp Industry Daily.
The USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service, which spearheaded drafting federal hemp production regulations, said in June the agency would release the federal regulations Aug. 1.
But William Richmond, head of the Specialty Crops Program in the USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service, said last month the regulations have been delayed in large part because the agency was grappling with the 2018 Farm Bill‘s requirement for a national THC testing protocol “using post-decarboxylation or other similarly reliable methods.”
“While the USDA struggling with this is somewhat understandable, the agency’s delay only exacerbates the state and local law patchwork problem that currently exists,” Havens said.
Earlier this week, USDA Undersecretary Greg Ibach told the National Farmers Union that drawing up hemp rules have been “complicated,” but the agency is “committed to having a rule out” soon.
In remarks reported by IEG Policy, an agribusiness news site, Ibach joked that hemp is “the only thing that anybody really wants to know about when I go anywhere.”
Once released, the USDA regulations will be temporary for the first year, said Geoff Whaling, chair of the National Hemp Association.
“(This will) allow the states to not only participate for the 2020 grow season (and) allow all stakeholders the opportunity to begin to implement the regulations and identify areas that may need small fixes,” Whaling wrote in an email to Hemp Industry Daily.
“This is a sound process, for if the USDA issued permanent regulations, they will be much more difficult to amend or fix without a lengthy process.”
The Farm Bill calls for federal authorities to allow states to set their own rules for hemp production, as long as certain criteria are met.
But the states will have to get USDA approval first, a step that won’t happen until after the national guidelines are released.
Source: https://hempindustrydaily.com/sources-usda-hemp-rules-drafted-and-awaiting-white-house-approval/
Uuuhhhhhhh, hemp.
So all public companies issuing common shares are "share-selling, diluting schemes"?
Hmm, neat.
Next Meeting:
Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019
9 a .m.
Gov. James G. Martin Building, State Fairgrounds
1025 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh
The Industrial Hemp Commission will hold a public meeting to review and aprove research pilot program applications. A program update will also be provided.
If you have questions about the meeting, please contact Beth Farrell at 919-707-3014.
Yeah... one would need proof of the welds, good point.
LMAO!
I agree, bio plastics is a good thing for HEMP. Thanks!
So 5 billion shares or infinity shares? Which one is it?
Micheal Bloomberg (77)
Ted Turner (80)
Rupert Murdoch (88)
Warren Buffet (89)
Shall I go on?
Either the gates burst through the shoddy welds, or the waters simply spill over the gates. There is no stopping the MASSIVE flood ahead
What "Scam"?? One would need evidence or proof for the claim of "scam" to be true.
Billions of shares being bought. Operating assets keep coming. Revenues keep stacking.
Bruce 85 FB followers away from 10,000!!!!
Industry fire hot! Flood waters too high, the gates will soon OVER FLOW!!!
Nope
HEMP FOR FIBER. BIO-PLASTICS.
This smokable hemp ban just a ploy to allow BigBacco enough time to adequately corner the market. Big business = big bribes. Someone lining pockets...
MAKING AMERICA HEMP AGAIN!!!
https://www.facebook.com/KingOfPot/videos/pcb.10218383634358656/10218383645798942/?type=3&theater
WHO'S PRODUCING AND PROCESSING ALL OF YOUR HEMP?!
I have a CBD butt suppository!
NFL starts tonight. You think Fife is at the game?
HAHA "Godzilla pattern" wtf?
Winds have been (about) high teens, with high 20's mph gusts. The damage starts at around 60+...
The worst is approaching but the storm is not expected to gain in strength from here, then Dorian moving on to Tropical Storm rating
Either way, thoughts go out to those in harms way. Stay safe.
WHO'S GONNA PROCESS ALL THE HEMP?
FLOODGATES
Hemp Farming Quadrupled In The U.S. This Year, New Report Shows
Sep 5, 2019
Tom Angell
The amount of land on which U.S. farmers are licensed to grow hemp has more than quadrupled this year. That's according to a report released on Thursday by advocacy group Vote Hemp.
Under the provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill, farmers have been able to grow crops for limited hemp research programs. But thanks to a new version of the large-scale agriculture legislation passed and signed into law late last year, the plant is now officially legal under federal law as long as farmers comply with state rules.
U.S. farmers have been licensed to grow 511,442 acres of marijuana's non-intoxicating cannabis cousin this year—a 455 percent increase over 2018 levels—according to Vote Hemp's annual survey of state agriculture departments.
That's up from 78,176 acres grown last year, 25,713 acres in 2017 and 9,770 acres in 2016, the group reported.
That said, Vote Hemp notes that it is usually the case that less hemp is actually grown than what is allowed under licensed acreage, so the organization plans to update its figures at a later date to reflect actual harvests. Still, it estimates that 230,000 acres of hemp will be planted in 2019 and 115,000 to 138,000 acres will end up being harvested—a huge increase from 2018 in any case.
Thirteen states enacted new hemp legalization laws this year following the removal of hemp from the federal Controlled Substances Act via the 2018 Farm Bill—with the only states not yet on board being Idaho, Mississippi, New Hampshire and South Dakota.
“We are seeing hemp cultivation dramatically expand in the U.S. in 2019, with over quadruple the number of acres licensed in hemp compared to last year and the addition of 13 more states with hemp programs,” Vote Hemp President Eric Steenstra said in a press release. “Now that we have lifted federal prohibition on hemp farming, it’s time build the infrastructure and expand hemp cultivation and the market for hemp products across the country so that all can reap the benefits of this versatile and sustainable crop.”
A total of 16,877 state licenses to cultivate hemp were issued to farmers and researchers this year, a 476 percent increase over 2018, the group found. Additionally there was a 483 percent annual jump in hemp processing licenses issued in 2019.
The U.S Department of Agriculture is expected to release its hemp legalization regulations soon. After those are finalized, federal regulators will be able to approve state hemp proposals under which farmers will be able to grow the crop at a large scale in the coming growing season.
Last week the department announced that hemp farmers are eligible for federal crop insurance.
The Federal Credit Union Administration clarified last month that credit unions are allowed to maintain accounts for hemp businesses.
Also last month the Environmental Protection Agency announced it is reviewing applications for pesticides to be used on hemp crops.
Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration is considering ways in which hemp-derived CBD can be allowed in food products or nutritional supplements.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tomangell/2019/09/05/hemp-farming-quadrupled-in-the-u-s-this-year-new-report-shows/#572d640c487d
125 ACRES OF HEMP GROWING IN DESERT
https://www.facebook.com/KingOfPot/videos/pcb.10218336514220682/10218336538341285/?type=3&theater
Traditional hemp states Colorado, Kentucky, and Oregon continue to lead in cultivation as the nation overall shows a projected 225,000 acres harvested in 2019, more than a 180% increase beyond 78,176 in 2018
https://newfrontierdata.com/marijuana-insights/increases-in-state-issued-hemp-licenses/
FFFFFLLLLLOOOOODDDDDGGGGGAAAAATTTTTEEEEESSSSS
Who's ready for a good old fashion SQUEEZY WEEZY?
"Soon" and "SEC" in the same sentence??? LMAO!
3.5 years too soon?
You forgot Schmidt and Fife?
3.5 yrs is soon?
Hemp Crop Insurance Update: "Whole-Farm" Coverage to Include Hemp
Thursday, August 29, 2019
The unavailability of crop insurance for hemp has long been a source of frustration and risk for growers in North Carolina, especially in the wake of recent disaster events like Hurricane Florence.
On August 27, the United States Department of Agriculture's Risk Management Agency (which, among other things, oversees federal crop insurance), announced the availability of whole-farm "coverage for hemp grown for fiber, flower or seeds" for the 2020 grow year.
A "Whole-Farm" policy insures all commodities on a farm, under one policy, against unavoidable natural causes of loss (e.g., hurricanes and other natural disasters). This type of coverage is most often seen with specialty crops, organic grows, and the like. It is available for any farm with up to $8.5 million in insured revenue in all counties of North Carolina. The coverage period is the duration of the grower's tax year. More information on the program can be found here.
For growers of hemp, this type of whole-farm insurance coverage is now available for "producers who are in areas covered by USDA-approved hemp plans or who are part of approved state or university research pilot programs." North Carolina has not yet submitted a hemp plan to the USDA for approval, but its legitimate hemp growers are licensed under the North Carolina Industrial Hemp Pilot Program, making them eligible for consideration for this coverage. There are several additional conditions that must be met for coverage, however, including that the grower must have a contract in place for the purchase of the insured hemp.
While there still is a long way to go before growers have the benefit of fully developed hemp crop insurance, the inclusion of hemp in whole-farm coverage is a significant step forward.
Source: https://www.natlawreview.com/article/hemp-crop-insurance-update-whole-farm-coverage-to-include-hemp
USDA: Hemp Qualifies for Federal Crop Insurance
Thu / Aug 29th TG Branfalt
Hemp farmers can file for federal crop insurance under a new directive from the United States Department of Agriculture.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced that hemp cultivated for fiber, flower, or seeds is now eligible for federal crop insurance. Hemp farmers eligible under the program can insure plants with revenues up to $8.5 million.
To be eligible, farmers must be compliant under their state and federal regulations and “hemp having THC above the compliance level will not constitute an insurable cause of loss,” the release states.
It’s the latest move by the USDA following the 2018 legalization of hemp federally via the Farm Bill. In May, the agency issued its first organic certification for a hemp flower product; although the agency had certified other hemp products in the past, such as Food and Drug Administration-approved hemp food products.
The following month, the USDA released guidance for importing hemp seeds, which previously required Drug Enforcement Administration approval.
Following the passage of the Farm Bill, states could enact their own hemp cultivation program but those must first be approved by the USDA to take effect; the agency has, so far, not approved any of the state-approved plans but the agency notes in the release that those regulations are expected later this year.
Source: https://www.ganjapreneur.com/usda-hemp-qualifies-for-federal-crop-insurance/
CROP INSURANCE. FEDERAL GRANTS. BANKING.
FLOODGATES
FIRST YEAR NATIONAL US HARVEST APPROACHETH!!!!!
FFFFFLLLLLOOOOODDDDD GGGGGAAAAATTTTTEEEEESSSSSS
Hemp Crop Insurance Coverage Available for 2020
Posted August 27, 2019 in Top Ag News
Certain industrial hemp growers will be able to obtain insurance coverage under the Whole-Farm Revenue Protection (WFRP) program for crop year 2020. USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA) today announced coverage for hemp grown for fiber, flower or seeds, which will be available to producers who are in areas covered by USDA-approved hemp plans or who are part of approved state or university research pilot programs.
“Numerous producers are anxious for a way to protect their hemp crops from natural disasters,” said RMA Administrator Martin Barbre. “The WFRP policy will provide a safety net for them. We expect to be able to offer additional hemp coverage options as USDA continues implementing the 2018 Farm Bill.”
Producers can obtain WFRP coverage for hemp now if they are part of a Section 7606 state or university research pilot as authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill. Other producers cannot obtain coverage until a USDA-approved plan is in place.
WFRP allows coverage of all revenue for commodities produced on a farm up to a total insured revenue of $8.5 million. It is popular for specialty crops, organic commodities and non-traditional crops.
The 2018 Farm Bill amended the Controlled Substances Act to address how industrial hemp is to be defined and regulated at the federal level, and those modifications cleared the way for the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation to offer policies for it. The Farm Bill defines hemp as containing 0.3 percent or less tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) on a dry weight basis.
Policy Requirements
RMA has started addressing the changes by offering hemp coverage under WFRP for the 2020 crop year. To be eligible, among other requirements, a hemp producer must comply with applicable state, tribal or federal regulations for hemp production and have a contract for the purchase of the insured industrial hemp.
WFRP provisions state that hemp having THC above the compliance level will not constitute an insurable cause of loss. Additionally, hemp will not qualify for replant payments under WFRP.
Hemp Plans
USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) is formulating regulations that will include specific details for both a USDA plan for the production of hemp and a process for submission of state, territorial or tribal plans to USDA. AMS is developing the regulation now, which is anticipated to post to the Federal Register later this year.
Once rulemaking is complete, RMA, the Farm Service Agency (FSA), the Natural Resources Conservation Service and other USDA agencies will share eligibility information on their programs, which include safety net, conservation, farm loan and disaster assistance programs. This includes FSA looking at additional coverage options through its Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program and through RMA-administered crop insurance.
More Information
For more information on the Hemp Production Program, visit the AMS Hemp Production webpage and these questions and answers.
For more information on WFRP coverage, visit the Hemp and Farm Bill Programs webpage on farmers.gov. RMA will publish a bulletin with additional information for approved insurance providers on Aug. 30.
Source: https://www.proag.com/news/hemp-crop-insurance-coverage-available-for-2020/?fbclid=IwAR242fiyB0jDKGc7YkvpeeHTVQvjm-czfTSRstslb0OgzdADn-rSb8AA17w
Next Meeting:
Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2019
2 p.m.
A public meeting will be held via telephone conference. Access to the conference call can be made at http://go.ncsu.edu/industrialhemp or by calling 1-929-205-6099 (U.S. toll) or 1-669-900-6833 (U.S. toll). The meeting ID is 696-292-229. Participants will be prompted to enter their name and email address to enter the meeting via the website, or prompted for a unique participant ID for the call. They should press # to access the call.
Purpose of this meeting: The Industrial Hemp Commission will hold a public meeting via conference call to review and aprove research pilot program applications.
If you have questions about the meeting, please contact Beth Farrell at 919-707-3014.
Disposable, eco-friendly tableware.
Throw in plates and napkins, and it's a picnic, with a cherry wine preroll on top!
The list does not end.
Yes, most CEO's would have that information.
Or call in to IR or their preroll sales dept for more info. You could inquire about the new goods for this year. Word is they are producing even more than last year to keep up with demand.
Most people would find that a positive, but not naked short manipulators.
If no one wants Hemp's prerolls, then why do people keep preordering them until they sellout?
How is FDA banning smokable hemp, but tobacco on shelves for centuries?
Goldman, ay...? I'll have to think about that one...
And how is that a "fact"?
Will go ahead and file that "National Ban" deep within the Fairy Folder, with the rest of them: "No felons", "Zero Sales", "Nothing to do with Hemp", etc, etc ...
Thanks...