New Arkansas law clamps down on Delta-8, hemp products
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – An act signed into law Thursday creates a new landscape for hemp product sales in Arkansas.
The act prohibits the sale of hemp products, such as Delta-8, containing excess tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the intoxicating ingredient in marijuana. It also requires anyone selling or manufacturing hemp products to have a yearly license.
A Working 4 You investigation in March found Delta-8 was being sold throughout the state without regulation due to a loophole in federal law. In some cases, people reported an unexpected reaction to what they thought was a harmless hemp product.
The act signed Thursday closes the loophole created by the federal farm act in 2018. That federal act allowed hemp products if the THC content was under 0.3%.
In some cases, producers created smokable or edible hemp products with over 0.3% THC, allowing a marijuana-like effect from an unregulated over-the-counter product. The act signed into law Thursday puts an end to that by limiting any hemp product to 0.3% maximum THC and requires a license to sell and distribute hemp products.
Other than the THC limit, the law requires any business selling hemp-derived products to be licensed by the state’s tobacco control board. The license for wholesale or retail sales, or manufacture of hemp-derived products, is $5,000 a year.
Under the law, businesses also have to maintain records of hemp product sales.
Under the new regulation, sales of hemp products to minors is prohibited.
The law also places specific labeling requirements on the packaging of hemp products, including forbidding referencing “candy” or cartoon figures.
The laws went into effect with the governor’s signature.
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