Pubdate: Fri, 20 Nov 2009
Source: Vail Daily (CO)
Copyright: 2009 Vail Daily
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wo3Ts7AI
Website: http://www.vaildaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3233
Author: Janet Urquhart
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

EL JEBEL MAY NOT GET MEDICINAL POT

Eagle County Has Enacted Temporary Land-use Regulations  Dictating
Where The Dispensaries Can Set Up Shop

EL JEBEL, Colorado -- Eagle County zoning regulations  may keep a
medical marijuana dispensary from cropping  up in El Jebel.

The county has enacted temporary land-use regulations  dictating where
the dispensaries can set up shop in  commercial and industrial zones,
and the Roaring Fork  Valley Regional Planning Commission voted
Thursday in  El Jebel to recommend county commissioners stiffen  those
rules.

Either way, it doesn't appear the rules would  accommodate a
dispensary in the sliver of Eagle County  that extends into the El
Jebel area, said town planner  Bob Narracci.

"There'll be plenty in the valley. We don't have to  worry about it,"
said commission member Temple  Glassier, acknowledging the growing
proliferation of  dispensaries from Aspen to Glenwood Springs. The
closest dispensary to El Jebel is at the WIN Institute,  just up
Highway 82 in west Basalt.

Eagle County is in the process of coming up with  detailed land-use
regulations for dispensaries in  unincorporated portions of the
county; the temporary  regulations are currently set to expire in
March. While  there is no dispensary in the piece of the county that
extends into the Roaring Fork Valley, there are already  several in
unincorporated areas on the Eagle side of  the county, Narracci noted.

The planning commission serving the Eagle side met  Wednesday; some
members expressed interest in shutting  the dispensaries out of the
unincorporated areas  altogether, but were advised that, legally, the
operations have to be permitted somewhere, Narracci  said.

The rules don't have to recognize the geographical  split in the
county and accommodate a dispensary in El  Jebel, though, he said.

"There just has to be somewhere in unincorporated Eagle  County where
they can occur," Narracci said.

Eagle County's temporary rules prohibit dispensaries  from locating
within 200 feet of residences, churches  and publicly owned community
buildings, among other  facilities, or within 500 feet of a school,
playground,  park or child-care facility.

The Roaring Fork commission recommended the county  adopt a 500-foot
measure for everything. The Eagle  commission made the same
recommendation, Narracci said.  The Roaring Fork group also
recommended the  dispensaries not be allowed in industrial zones, only
  commercial ones.

It appears there is no commercially zoned land in El  Jebel that would
meet the criteria with the 500-foot  zone, and probably not with the
200-foot-limit either,  according to Narracci.

County commissioners are expected to take up the  recommendations next
week.

The county has also adopted temporary rules prohibiting  third-party
growers from cultivating marijuana to  supply dispensaries. Only
caregivers and patients are  allowed to grow medical marijuana in the
county, as  allowed by the state.

"We've been getting calls from parties who want to  operate
large-scale, greenhouse growing operations,"  Narracci said.

The Roaring Fork commission tabled discussion of the  full-blown
regulations the county has drafted, figuring  the rules will continue
to change as the state  government tries to get a handle on the
burgeoning  industry.

"I'm going to have a hard time wrestling with this  until the state
says, ‘We're going to regulate  this properly,'" said commission
member Matt Flink.

Citizen e-mails on the topic, Flink noted, are running  25-to-1
against allowing the dispensaries in  unincorporated Eagle County. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D