Ariz. Admin. Code § R3-4-1008 - Compliance; Recordkeeping; Audits
A. General compliance requirements.
1. All licensees are subject to audits to
ensure compliance with the recordkeeping requirements in
R3-4-1008(B);
2. An authorized
Department inspector shall be allowed access to all growing, storage, and
processing locations of a licensee's industrial hemp crop, hemp seed,
propagative material, harvested material, handling and processing equipment to
conduct a visual inspection and determine if a violation of this Article may
exist.
B. Recordkeeping.
All licensees may be audited to ensure compliance with all recordkeeping
requirements. A licensee shall comply with the recordkeeping requirements in
this subsection at a minimum. Additional recordkeeping requirements may be
established as set by policy and updated annually.
1. All records documenting the geospatial
location, growth, propagation, harvesting, storage, agronomic data, shipping,
receiving, transportation, distribution, processing, sale, purchase, third
party analysis or research of all plants, seeds and materials shall be kept
within the state of Arizona and made available for inspection on
request.
2. An in-state agent must
be maintained for receipt and storage of records.
3. All records shall be maintained for not
less than five years.
C.
Sampling and testing. All licensees are subject to the collection of a
representative sample of any Cannabis plant, hemp crop or
harvested hemp in possession of the licensee or licensee's agent to determine
the total concentration of delta-9 THC as reported by a certified laboratory to
ensure compliance with this Article and any state or federal law, rule or order
regulating Cannabis as an agricultural commodity. Unless
otherwise specified in an alternative performance-based sampling policy, crops
shall be sampled within 30 days prior to the intended date of harvest and
samples must be collected from mature flowering plants. All sampling agents
must have undergone official sampling training by an authorized representative
of the Department for the collection of cannabis samples for determination of
compliance with the program. A licensed grower shall not harvest an industrial
hemp crop prior to the collection of an official sample for compliance
purposes.5.
7. Sample results. A copy of any result produced by a
certified laboratory shall be provided to the licensee, but such result is the
property of the state.
1. Sampling method. The Department
shall publish a policy on the procedures used by the Department to sample a
Cannabis plant or crop ; and may publish a policy or policies for alternative,
performance-based methods that have the potential to ensure, at a 95% level of
confidence, that the Cannabis plant or crop will not test above the acceptable
hemp total delta-9 THC level, such policy or policies may be updated annually
as dictated by changing circumstances.
2. Only an authorized Department inspector, or other authorized sampling agent, may collect an official sample to determine
compliance with this Article.
3.
When collecting an official sample, an authorized Department inspector, or
other authorized sampling agent, shall: a.
b. Collect a
representative sample of the crop, plants or harvested crop;
b.
c.
Split the official sample as follows:
c.
d. Label all official samples with an official sample
number, sample date, collector name, location ID, and grower license ID
number;
d.
e. Apply official custody seals to all official
samples; and
e.
f. Complete an official chain of custody form that is
signed and dated by the inspector and licensee or the licensee's
representative.
a.
Ensure the licensee or authorized representative of the licensee is present
during the collection of the official sample;
i.
One-third for retention by the Department or to provide to a certified
laboratory for compliance with this Article;
ii. One-third for confirmation of analytical
results if required; and
iii.
One-third that is provided to the licensee for retention or to utilize for
additional analysis by a third party laboratory. Any results provided to the
licensee by a third party laboratory do not supersede official
results.
4.
Sample transport and submission. The Department shall not be liable for samples
that are detained by any federal, state or local law enforcement agency.
a. If a certified laboratory receives a
sample with a broken custody seal or incomplete or missing chain of custody,
that sample shall be null and void;
b. All official samples retained by the
Department are the property of the Department; and
c. The Department is not liable to reimburse
the licensee for official samples collected.
5. Laboratory Standards. Certified
laboratories conducting testing of hemp must conduct analytical testing for
purposes of detecting the total calculable amount of delta-9 THC and shall meet
the following standards:
a. Laboratory
quality assurance must ensure the validity and reliability of test
results;
b. Analytical method
selection, validation, and verification must ensure that the testing method
used is appropriate and that the laboratory can successfully perform the
testing;
c. The demonstration of
testing validity must ensure consistent and accurate analytical performance;
and
d. Method performance
specifications must ensure analytical tests are sufficiently sensitive for the
purposes of the detectability requirements of this Article.
e. At a minimum, analytical testing of
samples for total calculable amount of delta-9 THC levels must use
post-decarboxylation or other similarly reliable methods approved by the U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture. The testing methodology must consider the potential
conversion of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) in hemp into delta-9
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). The test result must reflect the total calculable
amount of delta-9 THC. Testing methodologies meeting these requirements
include, but are not limited to, gas chromatography and high-performance liquid
chromatography.
f. The total
delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration level shall be determined and
reported on a dry weight basis.
g.
Certified laboratories must report the measurement of uncertainty (MU) of the
methodology, in reference to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Laboratory
Testing Guidelines, U.S. Hemp Production Program, published on January 15,
2021, or its successor document in reference to the AOAC International
(Association of Official Agricultural Chemists), Standard Method Performance
Requirements (SMPRs®) for Quantitation of Cannabinoids in Plant Materials
of Hemp (Low THC Varieties Cannabis sp.) SMPR 2019.003 found at the website:
https://www.aoac.org/resources/smpr-2019003/ . Certified laboratories
must also report the MU as a ± value and report the total delta-9 value
in the same unit of measure used to report the MU.
h. Any sample test result showing with at
least 95% confidence that the total delta 9 THC content of the sample is higher
than the acceptable hemp THC level shall be conclusive evidence that the lot
represented by the sample is not in compliance with this Article.
6. DEA Registration. Certified
laboratories must also be registered with DEA to handle controlled substances
under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), 21 CFR part 1301.13 no later than
December 31, 2022.
D. Crop compliance.
1. Compliant crops. When a crop is found to
be compliant with the regulations governing the production of industrial hemp,
a grower will be provided documentation authorizing the movement of the harvest
lot. Upon receiving authorization from the Department the licensed grower shall
not comingle the harvest lot with any other compliant or non-compliant harvest
lot. The grower shall:
a. Harvest the
compliant harvest lot within 30 business days;
b. Notify the Department if there is a delay
in the 30 business day harvest window due to inclement weather or other natural
causes; and
c. Notify the
Department prior to shipping or transporting the harvest lot as provided in
section
R3-4-1011(D).
2. Non-compliant crops.
Non-compliant crops with a total delta-9 THC concentration greater than 0.3%
shall not be allowed into the stream of commerce. When a crop is found to be
non-compliant with the regulations governing the production of industrial hemp,
a grower will be required, within 15 business days of notification of
non-compliance, to either voluntarily dispose of the crop by a method
prescribed in
R3-4-1013(F)
and submit a notice of destruction R3-4-1011(E), together with supporting
evidence of disposal. Alternatively the grower may submit a corrective action
plan under
R3-4-1013(D)
to remediate the crop to achieve compliance with the regulations governing the
production of industrial hemp. A corrective action plan may be issued by the
Department, or if submitted by the grower, must be approved by the Department.
A corrective action plan will only be approved if the total delta-9 THC
concentration is greater than 0.3% and less than 1.0%. Failure to dispose of
the crop or comply with approved corrective action plan may result in a notice
of violation under R3-4-1012 . Upon receiving a notification of noncompliance
from the Department, the licensed grower shall not move or transport the
non-compliant crop from the hemp site, unless otherwise permitted by the
Department to remediate the crop. Non-compliant crops shall not be comingled
with any other compliant or non-compliant harvest lot. Harvest lots with a
total delta-9 THC concentration greater than 1.0% constitutes a violation and
must be disposed of by method indicated in section
R3-4-1013(F).
E. Volunteer hemp plants. It shall
be the responsibility of the licensee to monitor and destroy volunteer hemp
plants.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.