Their field trip comes just days after President Joe Biden announced he’s pardoning people convicted of possessing small amounts of marijuana.
OTSEGO, Minn. — At first glance, it looks like a regular Minnesota farm. But NorthStar Hemp is one of only a couple hundred farms statewide that can legally grow cannabis.
Monday, as some of the final crops were harvested before winter, a group of Macalester College students got a close look at the plants and the CBD products they become. Junior Ishan Rayen also got to experience what it’s like to chop down a sturdy hemp bush.
The students went on the field trip not through school but with Aeterna Media, a creative marketing agency in the Twin Cities.
Aeterna CEO Will Preble said the goal of giving students a firsthand look at the cannabis farm was to get them thinking about the economic impacts of the industry, like job creation.
Ben Lipkin and Neil Hultgren started the farm in 2019.
Perhaps the Star Tribune put it best: “Minnesota’s cannabis industry is going through an awkward phase.” The state legalized THC edibles and drinks last summer without targeted taxation or funding for enforcement. The Legislature will likely take on such issues next year, with a new makeup of lawmakers following November’s election.
For Rayen, who’s double majoring in physics and economics, says he now feels better prepared to vote.
Educational tours of the NorthStar Hemp farm are now over for the season, but will be back in August next year.
Source: Kare11.