Pubdate: Sun, 3 Jan 2010 Source: Summit Daily News (CO) Copyright: 2009 Summit Daily News Contact: http://apps.summitdaily.com/forms/letter/index.php Website: http://www.summitdaily.com/home.php Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/587 Author: Robert Allen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Breckenridge Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) BRECK RESIDENTS TAKE ACTIVE ROLE IN GOVERNMENT IN 2009 Legislation Passed Will Affect Town Long-Term BRECKENRIDGE - Breckenridge was abuzz with democracy in 2009 as the town marked its 150th anniversary. One successful grassroots petition drive led to decriminalizing private use of small amounts of marijuana, while another caused the elimination of a mandate for residential firebreaks. Mayor John Warner said he was "disappointed" in the outcome of the firebreak ordinance, which town and local fire officials had spent several months framing. "If I wasn't a full-time dentist, I think I would like to have spent the time talking to members of the public that signed the petition directly and try to dispel some of their fears about it," he said. The mandatory "defensible space" ordinance was one of the few in 2009 that caused a split in the council, but Warner said he's proud of the council's "genuine desire to move our community forward." "Most of the time we tend to bury the hatchet and go on to the next issue," he said. Marijuana Laws As of Jan. 1, town code no longer criminalizes adult personal possession of less than 1 ounce of marijuana for private use. "Hopefully people understand that any public use or display - there will be no tolerance for that," town police chief Rick Holman said. Warner said he was also concerned with how many people in the community confused the marijuana decriminalization with regulations for marijuana dispensaries - which came about following a statewide ballot item in 2000 allowing medical marijuana. "I think there was a pretty high level of confusion - not only from the print media but what you were hearing about both issues on the radio and on the television ... I think a lot of citizens felt they were the same issue," he said. "Clearly as a board, we weren't promoting the possession." The council had the option to approve marijuana decriminalization not long after the petition signatures were certified, but it voted to put the item on the ballot instead. The final vote came to more than 70 percent in favor of decriminalization. Breckenridge was the first Summit County community and one of the early ones in Colorado to draft a set of regulations for medical marijuana dispensaries. The final product, with the help of town staff, Holman and town attorney Tim Berry, has set an example for other communities across the state. "I believe we broke some new ground in terms of creating regulations on where (dispensaries could be located)," Warner said, adding that the map was reworked about five times. McMansion policy Town residents also got involved with the neighborhood preservation policy approved to limit proliferation of McMansions in Breckenridge. After many homeowners and people involved in the housing industry became upset by early proposals, a task force was created for compromise. "That is new, and I think it's great, and I think that the task force was able to answer a lot of peoples' questions," Warner said. "The reality is it didn't please everybody, but it pleased enough that (we said,) 'Lets go for it and pass this thing.'" While the above decisions will affect the town over time, budget cuts because of a $2 million to $3 million 2009 revenue shortfall were implemented almost immediately as the picture became more grim. "I'm not too sure we got the message out that we all need to share the pain," Warner said. Every department in the town government was affected, and residents were unhappy to learn of a reduced snowplowing schedule and reduced hours or services at amenities such as the Breckenridge Recreation Center, Stephen C. West Ice Arena and Gold Run Nordic Center. "We certainly don't want to diminish our residents' experience here, but we have to live within the confines of our budget," Warner said. He said that in many ways 2009 was a good year. "It seems like the crowds are coming back to the community, and I wish we had a little more snow - that would be my only buzzkill right now, is we could use some more snow," Warner said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake