Hartford Business Journal

20220411_Issue

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1463910

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 35

10 HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | April 11, 2022 Left Out Struggling hemp farmers want inclusion in CT's recreational cannabis market By Skyler Frazer sfrazer@hartfordbusiness.com T he way Brant Smith sees it, his 70,000-square-foot greenhouse hemp operation in Cheshire is at least the fourth best cannabis growing facility in the state. "I believe that I have the best facility in the state to grow recreational marijuana right now, besides potentially the medical marijuana people," said Smith, owner of Hydroclonix LLC and its two subsidiaries, Hemp House Farms and Foxboro Farms CBD. Smith, 68, has been a Connecticut farmer for 20 years and has grown hemp at his greenhouse facility at 35 Diana Court, since the state program began in 2019. He sells hemp wholesale, or uses it to make goods such as CBD oil, gummies and topicals. Like many of his peers, Smith said he is interested in converting his hemp operation to adult-use cannabis production, but state law doesn't give him direct access to that market. The recreational marijuana law passed last year allows the state's current medical cannabis growers to apply for a hybrid license so they can also serve the adult-use market; hemp farmers don't have a similar option. There are also no license types that give hemp farmers priority to enter the recreational market. That means out-of-state cultivators will likely continue to expand their operations in Connecticut while local farmers and growers get left on the sidelines, Smith said "I'm frustrated because I'm basically being shut out of this process, at least at this point," he added. Smith and other hemp industry advocates are lobbying state lawmakers to give them better access to the adult-use market, and they have support from at least a few lawmakers. Their efforts are gaining increased attention after New York, which also legalized recreational marijuana last year, recently established a new grow license for hemp farmers. Hemp vs. cannabis Hemp and marijuana are grown the same way, because they're the same plant. The key difference is the amount of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, allowed in the product. THC is the psychoactive compound in cannabis that causes a "high" for users. Recreational cannabis products can have higher THC levels. "We're called hemp farmers, but cannabis is cannabis," said Rebecca Goetsch, owner of Running Brook Farms in Killingworth. Connecticut's hemp program began in 2019 but the industry is off to a rocky start, disrupted in significant ways by the pandemic. By the end of 2021, Connecticut had licensed 98 hemp growers and 49 manufacturers creating cannabidiol (CBD) products like oils and tinctures, according to the state Department of Agriculture. More than 328 acres have been harvested so far, but hemp production has declined since the program's start: 74 acres of hemp were harvested in 2021 compared to 134 acres in 2020 and 120 acres in 2019. The hemp industry was hit by supply chain problems during the pandemic and profit margins have shrunk with greater regional and national competition, Smith said. Jeff Wentzel, founder of the CT Hemp Industry Association, said hemp farmers went online in May 2019 and had less than a year to network and make business connections before the pandemic hit. It's been a struggle to make up for that lost time, he said. "Farmers don't Zoom," Wentzel said of the need for in-person networking events for his industry. "The hemp market is not healthy, it's declining and it's very hard to get distribution for it." Wentzel said most hemp farmers are interested in growing recreational cannabis. Some even entered the hemp industry to get their feet wet growing the plant. "They wanted to get some experience while anticipating the recreational market," Wentzel said. Goetsch, 46, is one such grower. Through her brand Running Brook Hemp Co., she grows hemp and sells the flower with high levels of CBD to customers to smoke. She said she'll be applying for a cannabis cultivator license for the state's recreational program under a new entity. "We don't need to mince words, some of us are in it for farming CBD and hemp, and a lot of us got into it just to gain the expertise to grow marijuana," Goetsch said. Smith said his business primarily sells wholesale hemp flower to companies that resell it or extract CBD to use in other forms. Prices for these products have dropped recently, and Smith said expansion into legal recreational cannabis could help companies remain profitable. "I'm a businessman: let's say I can get $500 a pound for my hemp flower, I can get five times that for the marijuana flower and the costs are exactly the same," Smith said. Looking to other states Wentzel said he wants Connecticut legislators to mirror what a few other states have done to help hemp growers. In February, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a bill allowing provisional cannabis cultivator and processor licenses to go to existing hemp businesses. Brant Smith stands in his 70,000-square-foot greenhouse hemp facility in Cheshire. HBJ PHOTO | STEVE LASCHEVER Jeff Wentzel Snapshot of CT's hemp industry 2019 2020 2021 Licensed producers 109 140 98 Licensed lots 218 384 397 Acres planted 172 156 85 Acres harvested 120 134 74 Average lot size 1.44 acres 1.03 acres 0.56 acres Source: State Department of Agriculture's 2022 Hemp Producer Meeting

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Hartford Business Journal - 20220411_Issue