[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 195 (Tuesday, December 11, 2018)]
[Senate]
[Page S7390]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                            LEGALIZING HEMP

  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, on another matter, as I mentioned a 
moment ago, one key piece of our unfinished business is the farm bill. 
Last night, I used my very own hemp pen to sign the conference report, 
clearing the way for the House and Senate to pass legislation and send 
it to the President's desk. I am proud that the bill includes my 
provision to legalize the production of industrial hemp. It is a 
victory for farmers and consumers throughout our country.
  Fighting for Kentucky hemp has been a long struggle. My State was 
once the national leader in the growing and production of industrial 
hemp, but then, for decades, a Federal ban halted that progress and 
shut American farmers out of the hemp field. Don't get me wrong--Hemp 
could still be found all over our country in all kinds of products. The 
problem is that it is all being grown somewhere else and imported into 
America. It is time to let American growers get back in business with 
this versatile crop once again.
  The farmers, processors, and manufacturers in my State and across the 
country are ready for the hemp comeback. It began in 2014 when I 
secured the establishment of a hemp pilot program with the help of 
then-agricultural commissioner Jamie Comer. States like Kentucky got 
the chance to explore the plant's potential and show us just what hemp 
could do, and the results have been nothing short of extraordinary. 
Now, American-grown hemp can be found in your food, your clothes, and 
even in your car dashboard. The results mean jobs, economic growth, and 
new opportunity. Last year alone, hemp products contributed more than 
$16 million to Kentucky's economy, and that was just from the pilot 
program--just from the pilot program.
  At a time when farm income is down and our growers are struggling, 
industrial hemp is a bright spot of agriculture's future.
  My provision in the farm bill will not only legalize domestic hemp, 
but it will also allow State departments of agriculture to be 
responsible for its oversight. In Kentucky, that means that 
Commissioner Ryan Quarles--another champion of hemp--will be able to 
help farmers thrive. And I know the occupant of the Chair is familiar 
with Commissioner Quarles.
  When the Senate votes on this legislation in the coming days, we will 
also be voting to give farmers throughout the country the chance to tap 
into hemp's potential and take part in its future. I have been proud to 
work with my colleagues in Congress, such as Senator Ron Wyden, and 
with hemp advocates in Kentucky to get to this point. Obviously, I will 
be proudly voting for this bill.

                          ____________________