Bill Text: FL S1876 | 2020 | Regular Session | Engrossed
Bill Title: State Hemp Program
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Failed) 2020-03-14 - Died in returning Messages [S1876 Detail]
Download: Florida-2020-S1876-Engrossed.html
CS for CS for CS for SB 1876 First Engrossed 20201876e1 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to the state hemp program; amending s. 3 500.03, F.S.; revising the definition of the term 4 “food” to include hemp extract for purposes of the 5 Florida Food Safety Act; amending s. 500.12, F.S.; 6 providing that a person operating a minor food outlet 7 that sells hemp extract is not exempt from certain 8 food permit requirements; amending s. 581.217, F.S.; 9 redefining the term “hemp extract”; directing the 10 Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, in 11 consultation with the Administration Commission, to 12 submit an amended plan for the state program to the 13 United States Secretary of Agriculture under certain 14 circumstances; providing that hemp extract that does 15 not meet certain requirements will be considered 16 adulterated or misbranded; prohibiting the sale of 17 certain hemp extract products to individuals under a 18 specified age; revising the contents of the 19 department’s required monthly report to the United 20 States Secretary of Agriculture; authorizing the 21 department to contract with entities to provide 22 certain collection, testing, and disposal services; 23 requiring samples to be taken within a specified 24 timeframe before the anticipated harvest; providing 25 that the Industrial Hemp Advisory Council is the sole 26 advisory body to provide information, advice, and 27 expertise regarding the program to the department; 28 prohibiting the creation of other advisory bodies for 29 such purpose; providing terms for advisory council 30 members and the council chair; providing requirements 31 for filling advisory council vacancies; directing the 32 department to submit a report that provides 33 recommendations for program fees to the Legislature by 34 a specified date; providing an effective date. 35 36 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 37 38 Section 1. Paragraph (n) of subsection (1) of section 39 500.03, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 40 500.03 Definitions; construction; applicability.— 41 (1) For the purpose of this chapter, the term: 42 (n) “Food” includes: 43 1. Articles used for food or drink for human consumption; 44 2. Chewing gum; 45 3. Articles used for components of any such article; 46 4. Articles for which health claims are made, which claims 47 are approved by the Secretary of the United States Department of 48 Health and Human Services and which claims are made in 49 accordance with s. 343(r) of the federal act, and which are not 50 considered drugs solely because their labels or labeling contain 51 health claims;and52 5. Dietary supplements as defined in 21 U.S.C. s. 53 321(ff)(1) and (2); and 54 6. Hemp extract as defined in s. 581.217. 55 56 The term includes any raw, cooked, or processed edible 57 substance; ice; any beverage; or any ingredient used, intended 58 for use, or sold for human consumption. 59 Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section 60 500.12, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 61 500.12 Food permits; building permits.— 62 (1)(a) A food permit from the department is required of any 63 person who operates a food establishment or retail food store, 64 except: 65 1. Persons operating minor food outlets that sell food, 66 except hemp extract, that is commercially prepackaged, not 67 potentially hazardous, and not time or temperature controlled 68 for safety, if the shelf space for those items does not exceed 69 12 total linear feet and no other food is sold by the minor food 70 outlet. 71 2. Persons subject to continuous, onsite federal or state 72 inspection. 73 3. Persons selling only legumes in the shell, either 74 parched, roasted, or boiled. 75 4. Persons selling sugar cane or sorghum syrup that has 76 been boiled and bottled on a premise located within the state. 77 Such bottles must contain a label listing the producer’s name 78 and street address, all added ingredients, the net weight or 79 volume of the product, and a statement that reads, “This product 80 has not been produced in a facility permitted by the Florida 81 Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.” 82 Section 3. Paragraph (e) of subsection (3) and subsections 83 (4), (7), (9), (11), (12), and (14) of section 581.217, Florida 84 Statutes, are amended, and subsection (15) is added to that 85 section, to read: 86 581.217 State hemp program.— 87 (3) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term: 88 (e) “Hemp extract” means a substance or compound intended 89 for ingestion, containing more than trace amounts of 90 cannabinoid, or for inhalation whichthatis derived from or 91 contains hemp and whichthatdoes not contain other controlled 92 substances. The term does not include synthetic CBD or seeds or 93 seed-derived ingredients that are generally recognized as safe 94 by the United States Food and Drug Administration. 95 (4) FEDERAL APPROVAL.—The department shall seek approval of 96 the state plan for the regulation of the cultivation of hemp 97 with the United States Secretary of Agriculture in accordance 98 with 7 U.S.C. s. 1639p within 30 days after adopting rules. If 99 the state plan is not approved by the United States Secretary of 100 Agriculture, the Commissioner of Agriculture, in consultation 101 with and with final approval from the Administration Commission, 102 shall develop a recommendation to amend the state plan and 103 submit the recommendation to the Legislature. If revisions to 104 the state plan may be made without statutory changes, the 105 department, in consultation with and with final approval from 106 the Administration Commission, must submit an amended plan to 107 the United States Secretary of Agriculture. 108 (7) DISTRIBUTION AND RETAIL SALE OF HEMP EXTRACT.— 109 (a) Hemp extract may only be distributed and sold in the 110 state if the product: 111 1.(a)Has a certificate of analysis prepared by an 112 independent testing laboratory that states: 113 a.1.The hemp extract is the product of a batch tested by 114 the independent testing laboratory; 115 b.2.The batch contained a total delta-9 116 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration that did not exceed 0.3 117 percenton a dry-weight basispursuant to the testing of a 118 random sample of the batch; and 119 c.3.The batch does not contain contaminants unsafe for 120 human consumption. 121 2.(b)Is distributed or sold in a containerpackagingthat 122 includes: 123 a.1.A scannable barcode or quick response code linked to 124 the certificate of analysis of the hemp extract batch by an 125 independent testing laboratory; 126 b.2.The batch number; 127 c.3.The Internet address of a website where batch 128 information may be obtained; 129 d.4.The expiration date; and 130 e.5.The number of milligrams of each marketed cannabinoid 131 per servinghemp extract; and1326. A statement that the product contains a total delta-9133tetrahydrocannabinol concentration that does not exceed 0.3134percent on a dry-weight basis. 135 (b) Hemp extract distributed or sold in violation of this 136 section shall be considered adulterated or misbranded pursuant 137 to chapter 500, chapter 502, or chapter 580. 138 (c) Products that are intended for inhalation and contain 139 hemp extract may not be sold in this state to a person who is 140 under 21 years of age. 141 (9) DEPARTMENT REPORTING.—The department shall submit 142 monthly to the United States Secretary of Agriculture a report 143 of the locations in the state where hemp is cultivated or has 144 been cultivated within the past 3 calendar years. The report 145 must include the contact information for each licensee and the 146 total acreage of hemp planted, harvested, and, if applicable, 147 disposed of by each licensee. 148 (11) ENFORCEMENT.— 149 (a) The department shall enforce this section. 150 (b) Every state attorney, sheriff, police officer, and 151 other appropriate county or municipal officer shall enforce, or 152 assist any agent of the department in enforcing, this section 153 and rules adopted by the department. 154 (c) The department, or its agent, is authorized to enter 155 any public or private premises during regular business hours in 156 the performance of its duties relating to hemp cultivation. 157 (d) The department shall conduct random inspections, at 158 least annually, of each licensee to ensure that only certified 159 hemp seeds are being used and that hemp is being cultivated in 160 compliance with this section. The department may contract with 161 entities to provide sample collection, laboratory testing, and 162 disposal services to implement this section. 163 (12) RULES.—By August 1, 2019,The department, in 164 consultation with the Department of Health and the Department of 165 Business and Professional Regulation, shall initiate rulemaking 166 to administer the state hemp program. The rules must provide 167 for: 168 (a) A procedure that uses post-decarboxylation or other 169 similarly reliable methods and a measure of uncertainty for 170 testing the delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of 171 cultivated hemp. The sample must be taken no more than 15 days 172 before the anticipated harvest by a federal, state, local, or 173 tribal law enforcement agency. 174 (b) A procedure for the effective disposal of plants, 175 whether growing or not, that are cultivated in violation of this 176 section or department rules, and products derived from those 177 plants. 178 (14) INDUSTRIAL HEMP ADVISORY COUNCIL.—An Industrial Hemp 179 Advisory Council, an advisory council as defined in s. 20.03, is 180 established to provide information, advice, and expertise to the 181 department with respect to plans, policies, and procedures 182 applicable to the administration of the state hemp program. 183 Notwithstanding ss. 377.6015 and 570.232, the Industrial Hemp 184 Advisory Council is the sole advisory body to provide 185 information, advice, and expertise related to the state hemp 186 program to the department, and no other advisory body may be 187 created for such purpose. 188 (a) The advisory council is adjunct to the department for 189 administrative purposes. 190 (b) The advisory council shall be composed of all of the 191 following members: 192 1. Two members appointed by the Commissioner of 193 Agriculture. 194 2. Two members appointed by the Governor. 195 3. Two members appointed by the President of the Senate. 196 4. Two members appointed by the Speaker of the House of 197 Representatives. 198 5. The dean for research of the Institute of Food and 199 Agricultural Sciences of the University of Florida or his or her 200 designee. 201 6. The president of Florida Agricultural and Mechanical 202 University or his or her designee. 203 7. The executive director of the Department of Law 204 Enforcement or his or her designee. 205 8. The president of the Florida Sheriffs Association or his 206 or her designee. 207 9. The president of the Florida Police Chiefs Association 208 or his or her designee. 209 10. The president of the Florida Farm Bureau Federation or 210 his or her designee. 211 11. The president of the Florida Fruit and Vegetable 212 Association or his or her designee. 213 (c) Each advisory council member shall be appointed to a 4 214 year term, and any vacancy in the membership of the council must 215 be filled in the same manner as the original appointment for the 216 remainder of the unexpired term. For the purpose of achieving 217 staggered terms, the initial members appointed to the council 218 shall serve the following terms: 219 1. Four years for members appointed by the Governor. 220 2. Three years for members appointed by the President of 221 the Senate or the Speaker of the House of Representatives. 222 3. Three years for members appointed by the Commissioner of 223 Agriculture. 224 4. Two years for all other appointed members. 225 (d)(c)The advisory council shall elect by a two-thirds 226 vote of the members one member to serve as chair of the council. 227 The chair shall serve for a term of 1 year. 228 (e)(d)A majority of the members of the advisory council 229 constitutes a quorum. 230 (f)(e)The advisory council shall meet at least once 231 annually at the call of the chair. 232 (g)(f)Advisory council members shall serve without 233 compensation and are not entitled to reimbursement for per diem 234 or travel expenses. 235 (15) FEES.—By December 1, 2020, the department shall submit 236 a report to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the 237 House of Representatives which provides recommendations for 238 initial license application fees and license renewal fees 239 sufficient to cover the costs of implementing and administering 240 this section. If such fees do not cover the costs of inspections 241 and testing, the department shall include a separate cost 242 breakdown for any other program fees that the department 243 recommends and anticipates are necessary. 244 Section 4. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.