The American Dream is Under Attack Illinois Black Hemp Association Shines Light on the Businesses Impacted By Recent Proposed Legislation Efforts

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The American Dream is Under Attack  Illinois Black Hemp Association  Shines Light on the Businesses  Impacted By Recent Proposed Legislation Efforts

The 2018 Farm Bill provided a promise of opportunity by invigorating farming, entrepreneurship and innovation that more owners, employees and consumers are beginning to enjoy, but now, the American Dream is under attack. 

Expansions & revisions of federal Farm Bills were designed to sustain opportunities for small family farms and related business, outsized by larger agribusinesses, which include the entire seed-to-sale chain – growers, processors, distributors, marketers, manufacturers and transporters. In Illinois, representatives of these facets of the industry have come together to form the Illinois Black Hemp Association to assure that the promise of opportunity is not stifled or cut off.

 

These advocates for hemp are a group of responsible, small business owners and family farmers who also want responsible regulation to eliminate bad actors who are selling illegitimate products. Drafting responsible, equitable legislation does not require, nor demand the over-reaching approach that was proposed in the recent bill. More major concerns with the recent proposed legislation were the obvious technical inaccuracies and scientifically unsound definitions. This would have effectively criminalized all hemp extraction in Illinois which would have created devastating outcomes for those small businesses and family farmers.

 

We would like to thank Illinois Speaker, Emanuel Chris Welch and the courageous Illinois House officials who took the time to listen to our concerns, examine and recognize the many flaws that were contained in the bill. In so doing, we ask that legislative leaders and the Governor collaborate with the Illinois Black Hemp Association in crafting legislation that ensures that the efforts to restore economic hope to disenfranchised communities, devastated by the failed “War on Drugs” and resultant disproportionate mass incarceration of people of color for non-violent cannabis sales & possession, are maintained.

 

We ask that care be taken with regards to Black farmers, urban agricultural educational initiatives, and holistic practitioners be taken into consideration when drafting responsible legislation. We do not want to demolish an economic ecosystem designed to level the playing field for previously disenfranchised communities.

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