Pubdate: Fri, 14 Dec 2007
Source: Willits News (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Willits News
Contact:  http://www.willitsnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4085
Author: Mike A'Dair
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

BOARD SETS LIMITS TO MEDICAL MARIJUANA INDUSTRY

On a 3-2 vote, supervisors Tuesday approved an  ordinance limiting the
number of medical marijuana  plants that can be grown in
unincorporated areas of  Mendocino County to 25 plants per assessor's
parcel.

Supervisors Jim Wattenburger, Kendall Smith and David  Colfax voted
for the measure; while supervisors John  Pinches and Michael Delbar
opposed it.

Pinches voted against it because he thought the measure  too
restrictive; Delbar voted against it because he  thought it was not
restrictive enough.

Before the vote, Ross Liberty, who lives on Highway 253  southwest of
Ukiah, warned supervisors the decision  they were about to make would
be historical.

"What this board is faced with is, is what does this  county want
itself to be? You are at a crossroads. This  place is horrendous to do
business. You can't find a  vendor. You can't find employees. You
can't have it  both ways. We're either going to be a county of
drug-dealers or we're gonna be a county of working  folk. You guys get
to decide that today."

The ordinance is the product of nearly a year of work  on the part of
the board of supervisors' Criminal  Justice Committee, chaired by
Wattenburger and rounded  out by Delbar.

The heart of the ordinance states: "The cultivation  of more than 25
marijuana plants on any legal parcel,  either inside or outside,
within the unincorporated  area of the county, is a pubic nuisance.
This  limitation shall be imposed regardless of the number of
qualified patients residing at such location. Further,  this
limitation shall be imposed notwithstanding any  assertion that the
person(s) cultivating marijuana are  the caregiver(s) for qualified
patients."

New version weaker than October draft

In other sections, the ordinance backs off on previous  attempts to
close loopholes against the medical  marijuana industry, which many
county residents have  claimed is "out of control."

Draft versions ordinance had stated "Wherever medical  marijuana is
grown, a current and valid, original,  state-issued marijuana card or
physician recommendation  must be displayed in such a manner as to
allow law  enforcement officers to easily see the card without  having
to enter any building of any type."

The version of the ordinance as passed required only  that a copy of
card or the physician's recommendation  may be posted.

The final ordinance also softened language requiring  marijuana grown
for medicinal purposes have "zip ties"  issued by the Mendocino
County's Sheriff's Office.

The final version of the ordinance also softened  posting language,
requiring anyone not the legal owner  of a parcel and is cultivating
marijuana on the land to  give written notice to the legal owner
before  commencing cultivation and post notice at the site that  the
landowner has been informed.

Allman likes it; Pinches, Delbar don't

The changes were made by County Counsel Jeanine Nadel,  who told the
board she didn't feel she had legal basis  to require more. The
changes were apparently sufficient  to cause Supervisor Michael Delbar
to vote against the  ordinance.

Before the vote, Delbar asked Nadel to put the old  wording back on at
least some of the points.

Delbar also asked Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman  whether he felt
jettisoning the requirement that  original medical marijuana cards be
posted would enable  dishonest growers to trick law
enforcement.

"In answer to your question, 'How are we not going to  get snookered?'
well, we're cops, and they're  robbers--and, well, we're gonna get
snookered," Allman  conceded.

But when asked by board Chairwoman Kendall Smith what  he thought the
effect would be if the ordinance was  approved, Allman said, "If this
passes, we are going to  see caregivers saying, 'We've got to be
reasonable with  our neighbors.'" Later he added, "If this ordinance
passes, we will see much more compliance with medical  marijuana
laws." Supervisor John Pinches submitted a  counterproposal before the
Criminal Justice Committee's  draft had gone to a final vote.

Pinches' two-tiered proposal would have removed all  numerical
limitations on the cultivation of medical  marijuana. The lowest level
stipulated that "not more  than two 25 mature plant medical marijuana
gardens,  separated by a barrier" would be allowed per legal  parcel
(without a use permit.)

Pinches said he wanted to double the allowed plant  count to
accommodate instances in which a parcel was  jointly owned, perhaps by
a husband and wife, or by two  people in a domestic partnership. Then
both co-owners  could legally grow medical marijuana.

The second tier stated people who are growing " 51 or  more mature
medical marijuana plants must obtain a  conditional use permit to
address issues such as needed  security, air quality, traffic and
impacts on water,  wildlife, water, etc."

The other supervisors showed little interest in  Pinches' offering. At
one point Smith said the county  did not have sufficient staff to deal
with all the use  permits that would be requested of the Planning and
Building Department, nor did it have sufficient staff  in the Tax
Collector's office to deal with applications  for zip ties.

Pinches said he could not support the CJC version of  the ordinance.
Noting a consultant who had been hired  by the county earlier this
year had estimated that the  marijuana industry represented two-thirds
of the  county's economy, Pinches said, "There's parts of the  economy
that I want to protect. People up in my  district, with the demise of
the timber industry the  way it is now, I don't want to take away
their last  sliver of hope."

The board decided to postpone discussion on a proposed  marijuana
dispensary ordinance until early next year.
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MAP posted-by: Steve Heath