(AP) - Grace DeNoya is used to getting snickers when people learn she’s majoring in marijuana.
"My
friends make good-natured jokes about getting a degree in weed," said
DeNoya, one of the first students in a new four-year degree program in
medicinal plant chemistry at Northern Michigan University. "I say, 'No,
it's a serious degree, a chemistry degree first and foremost. It's hard
work.
Organic chemistry is a bear.'"
Organic chemistry is a bear.'"
As a green gold rush in legal marijuana
and its non-drug cousin hemp spreads across North America, a growing
number of colleges are adding cannabis to the curriculum to prepare
graduates for careers cultivating, researching, analyzing and marketing
the herb.
Research shows there are high times ahead for all kinds of careers in cannabis, ranging from greenhouse and dispensary operators to edible product
developers, marketing specialists, quality assurance lab directors and
pharmaceutical researchers. Arcview Market Research, which focuses on
cannabis industry trends, projects the industry will support 467,000
jobs by 2022.
And
even in states where recreational marijuana remains illegal, including
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, some colleges have launched
cannabis studies programs in anticipation of legalization or to prepare
students for jobs in other states.
"We're
providing a fast track to get into the industry," said Brandon
Canfield, a chemistry professor at Northern Michigan University in
Marquette. Two years ago, he proposed a new major in medicinal plant
chemistry after attending a conference where cannabis industry
representatives spoke of an urgent need for analytical chemists for
product quality assessment and assurance.
The
four-year degree, which is the closest thing to a marijuana major at an
accredited U.S. university, has drawn nearly 300 students from 48
states, Canfield said. Students won't be growing marijuana, which was
recently legalized by Michigan voters for recreational use. But Canfield
said students will learn to measure and extract medicinal compounds
from plants such as St. John's Wort and ginseng and transfer that
knowledge to marijuana.
A
similar program is being launched at Minot State University in North
Dakota this spring.
The college said students will learn lab skills applicable to medical marijuana, hops, botanical supplements and food science industries.
The college said students will learn lab skills applicable to medical marijuana, hops, botanical supplements and food science industries.
"All
of our graduates are going to be qualified to be analysts in a lab
setting," Canfield said, noting that experience could lead to a position
paying $70,000 right out of school. Those wishing to start their own
businesses can choose an entrepreneurial track that adds courses in
accounting, legal issues and marketing.
"I
came in planning to do the bioanalytical track, maybe go work in a
lab," said DeNoya, 27, who was considering nursing school when she heard
about the NMU program. "I just switched to the entrepreneurial track. I
figured that would better position me, as the industry is still
expanding and changing and growing so much."
The
expected boom in cannabis-related jobs has colleges responding with a
range of offerings.
Colorado State University offers a cannabis studies minor focusing on social, legal, political and health impacts. Ohio State University, Harvard, the University of Denver and Vanderbilt offer classes on marijuana policy and law.
Colorado State University offers a cannabis studies minor focusing on social, legal, political and health impacts. Ohio State University, Harvard, the University of Denver and Vanderbilt offer classes on marijuana policy and law.
Universities
have done little research on marijuana because of federal restrictions,
but that's starting to change. UCLA's Cannabis Research Initiative,
which bills itself as one of the first academic programs in the world
dedicated to the study of cannabis, has studies underway ranging from
medical treatments to economic impacts.
Agricultural schools are also getting in on the action. The University of Connecticut is launching a cannabis horticulture program this spring.
"We're
following the market," said Jennifer Gilbert Jenkins, an assistant
professor at the State University of New York at Morrisville, a college
in rural central New York that's launching a new minor in cannabis
studies in its horticulture department this year. Students work with
hemp and other plants rather than marijuana, but can take internships at
medical marijuana facilities, Jenkins said.
In
New Jersey, Stockton University started an interdisciplinary cannabis
minor last fall and recently forged an academic partnership with Thomas
Jefferson University in Philadelphia that gives students the opportunity
for internships and research work in medical marijuana and hemp.
"Most
of the students are interested in novel business opportunities," said
Kathy Sedia, coordinator of the cannabis minor at Stockton.
Cannabis businesses
range from medical and recreational marijuana to foods, fabrics and
myriad other products derived from industrial hemp. The basis for all is
the cannabis sativa plant. Marijuana is produced by varieties with high
levels of THC, the chemical compound that makes people high.
Hemp has only a trace of THC, but produces cannabidiol, or CBD, used in a broad range of nutritional and therapeutic products that are all the rage right now.
Hemp has only a trace of THC, but produces cannabidiol, or CBD, used in a broad range of nutritional and therapeutic products that are all the rage right now.
Marijuana is legal for medical purposes in 33 states and as a recreational drug in 10. While marijuana remains illegal federally, the 2018 Farm bill cleared the way for widespread cultivation of hemp.
In
New York, where legislators are moving to legalize recreational use of
marijuana, hemp has become a new source of income for farmers as well as
jobs at processing and manufacturing businesses. The state's first
legal hemp crop was harvested in 2016 under a Morrisville research
license, which gave rise to the new cannabis minor.
"I
see a lot more farmers reaching out and trying to find people who know
about this new crop," said Colton Welch, an agriculture business student
pursuing the cannabis minor at Morrisville.
"We're only beginning to see the wide application this plant has."
"We're only beginning to see the wide application this plant has."
Karson
Humiston, founder of Vangst, an employment agency specializing in
cannabis jobs, said the industry outlook is bright for students.
"More
jobs are being created in this space than in any other space in North
America, with salaries sometimes more competitive than other
industries," Humiston said. "With every new state that legalizes, tons
of jobs are opening up."
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