Pubdate: Tue, 16 Feb 2010 Source: Fort Collins Coloradoan (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Fort Collins Coloradoan Contact: http://www.coloradoan.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.coloradoan.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1580 Author: Kevin Duggan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) POT SHOPS' NEIGHBORS EXPRESS SAFETY, LIFESTYLE CONCERNS IN FORT COLLINS The growth of the medical marijuana industry in Fort Collins has some residents worried about what that means for their neighborhoods. Much of the marijuana that is supplying local dispensaries is being produced locally by indoor "grows," including homes in residential areas, officials say. Of the 98 businesses with city sales tax licenses that identify themselves as being the medical marijuana trade, 40 are in residential zones. Proposed regulations being considered by the City Council would include a ban on grows in residential areas, with the exception of people who are growing only for themselves or one patient. Small producers could have up to 12 plants, six of which could be mature, or two ounces of marijuana in their homes and not have to be licensed as a medical marijuana dispensary, under the proposed regulations. Lloyd Walker, a longtime advocate for the Rolland Moore Park neighborhood, said he supports relegating growing operations to industrial zones. Allowing them in residential areas puts neighborhoods at risk for crime, including home invasions, he said. Allowing grows in rental properties is a particular concern, Walker said. A "favorite way" for illegal marijuana users to acquire pot is to "steal someone else's patch," he said. Walker said he would prefer to see fewer plants allowed at home-based grows to keep them from becoming targets. "There's a big difference between having two ounces in a desk drawer and six big plants in a basement grow," he said. "That's a recipe for nutty, stupid things happening." Other concerns about residential grows include inadequate electrical wiring to support growing equipment, such as sun lamps and humidifiers, officials say. An improperly vented grow can lead to moldy, unhealthy conditions that damage a house. But medical marijuana proponents say growing operations in homes can be safe and unobtrusive. Terri Lynn of Natural Alternatives for Health operates a small grow in her home, which sits in a neighborhood west of the CSU campus. Lynn delivers medicine to clients in Fort Collins, Loveland and other local cities. No clients come to her home, she said. Her neighbors aren't aware of her growing operation. College students, with their parties and dogs, are a bigger issue where she lives than her small business, she said. "There are all kinds of dangers in the neighborhood, and not all of them are related to marijuana," she said. "The fact is that, if you are doing this right, nobody should know what you are doing." The residential-grow issue has hit close to home twice for Rob Haas, who lives in southwest Fort Collins. A tenant at a rental property he owns set up a growing operation without his knowledge. And he said, a neighbor appears to have a growing operation in his home, which is guarded by two large dogs. Haas learned of the grow in his rental property when contacted by the city about an unpaid electricity bill for the house. The bill was for several hundred dollars. The renter admitted he was growing marijuana, Haas said. The renter was on the state's medical marijuana registry - and appeared to be in need of the medicine - so Haas allowed him to stay in the house. Shortly thereafter, the tenant was arrested on drug charges not related to medical marijuana. The tenant "disappeared," Haas said. His clients sometimes stopped by the house looking for him. In cleaning up the rental home, Haas found all of its windows had been screwed shut. The windows also were blocked by crates stacked up inside to prevent the bright growing lights from being seen from outside. A marijuana-growing operation can affect the entire neighborhood, he said. Security measures taken by growers - such as guard dogs - pose a threat to other residents. The safety of homes used for grows is another issue, he said, if they are not properly wired to handle growing equipment. Haas said he supports the city's plan to ban grows that would serve more than one patient from residential areas. "The right thing to do is make them move to somewhere more appropriate, like in an industrial area where the risk of fire or injury can be better managed and there is an abundance of electricity," he said. "They need to be inspected to make sure they meet all codes." Lynn said her growing operation meets all current city regulations and building codes. Forcing her to move the grow to an industrial area would add to the cost of running her business, which already operates on a thin margin. Forming a co-op with other small growers may be an option if she has to stop growing at her home, she said. Regulations being considered by the city and at the state level could increase the cost of medical marijuana to the point it is unaffordable for some patients, she said. "I'm already worried that the most disenfranchised people - those who are really sick and not the recreational users (that state politicians) are so worried about - are going to end up bearing most of the cost," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D