Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jan 2011
Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA)
Copyright: 2011 Record Searchlight
Contact:  http://www.redding.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360
Author: Evelyn Ward
Note: Evelyn Ward, an artist and educator, moved to Trinity County 
with her family from the San Francisco Bay area 25 years ago. She 
lives in Lewiston.

POT GROWING MAKES TROUBLE IN SHANGRI-LA

I've lived in a nice residential subdivision in the central part of 
Trinity County for 22 years.

We've had our share of bad neighbor episodes (drunken speeders, fiery 
disputes about road repair, etc.) but not like what we're having now.

In the last couple of years, there has been an influx of marijuana 
growers into our subdivision. One of the growers has put up multiple 
greenhouses on his two-acre parcel in addition to his one-acre 
outdoor marijuana garden.

This grower is the epitome of a bad neighbor. He harasses the 
neighbors with profanity, threats, horn honking, and speeding on our roads.

Numerous complaints to the sheriff and deputies and attempts at 
getting a restraining order have come to nothing.

Gone is our peaceful life of the past.

I was complaining about my neighborhood situation to a friend who 
lives in Hayfork. He looked at me musingly and said, "You think you 
have a problem?

Have you visited Hayfork recently?" No, I hadn't been to Hayfork for 
probably six years. "Well come down. I'll take you on a tour." The 
next Saturday, I took the beautiful (and winding) drive to Hayfork, 
enjoying the grand Hayfork valley opening out before me. Hayfork has 
always had a Wild West feel; it's a town of individuals, and proud of 
it. But as I drove down Highway 3 into town, something seemed 
different, and not in a good way. The same businesses still looked 
good. So what was wrong?

When I got to my friend's house, he asked, "Did you notice all the 
marijuana grows when you were coming into town and on Main Street?" 
No, I hadn't really.

OK - it was time for me to take "the tour." As we drove down Main 
Street, I became increasingly aware of the problems that the 
explosion of marijuana growing in Trinity County has brought to 
Hayfork. Grows ranging from a quarter to a half acre were sprinkled 
all along Main Street. The standard grow-in-town "look," I learned, 
was a bamboo and tarp fence enclosing the grow next to the house. 
(Some of the houses are condemned.) The yard often is filled with 
tents or ancient RVs and decrepit school buses - "housing" for the 
grow workers.

In the driveway are numerous vehicles, often brand new 4x4 pickups 
and U-Haul trailers for transporting the crop. And then there is the 
trash, often dumped everywhere. I saw larger multi-acre grows just on 
the edge of the main part of town. They were obvious, because graded 
and now-eroding roads scarred the hills, and log and slash piles from 
timber clear-cut to make room for marijuana gardens were in plain 
view from the highway.

I asked my friend how people lived in these dumps, so much like the 
Hoovervilles from the Great Depression. What did they do about 
electricity, water and sewage disposal?

He told me that some of the houses and of course the tents and 
ancient RVs have no electricity, water or sewage facilities. So what 
do the grow workers do for a bathroom? "You can imagine," he replied.

Now I could identify what created the different "look" in Hayfork: 
Main Street and the Highway 3 margins of town were rife with growers' 
"shanty towns" and all of the resultant mess that went with them. Why 
does this situation exist?

According to my friend, Hayfork citizens have been voicing concerns 
and calls to the county to address the numerous violations to 
existing county codes regarding building, environmental protection, 
sanitation, etc., to no avail.

We then drove through a couple of Hayfork's nicer subdivisions. 
Interspersed among the nice homes were other homes with, no surprise, 
the tell-tale fencing enclosing marijuana plots of anywhere from a 
half acre to an acre.

One house and grounds now looked like a prison compound.

Enclosing it was a quarter mile of new cyclone fencing, covered with 
new tarp. This effectively limited a view of the large outdoor grow 
inside the fence. Posted along the fence were big signs: "No 
Trespassing, Illegal to Enter this Property," as well as by other 
signs "Beware: Security Dogs." The grower had come from out of 
county, bought the land in the spring of 2010, put up the fence, and 
accomplished the grow. I wondered where the money came from to fund 
such large investment in property and materials.

I also wondered how an operation of this size, supposedly a 
Proposition 215 (medical marijuana) grow, could exist in a 
subdivision. But then I remembered. Our county has no regulations 
restricting grows in residential neighborhoods. Witness my own 
neighborhood problem with the commercial grower.

If we don't have regulations to deal with the explosion of marijuana 
grows in our county, we all may be facing Hayfork's situation in the 
near future.

As we drove on, I saw something that looked like huge circus tents.

I learned these were the processing tents for the marijuana harvest. 
Surrounding them were five or more small tents where the harvest workers lived.

There was only one Porta-potty for the operation. There were three 
large U-Haul trucks to take away the harvest, as well as the 
ubiquitous pit bull guard dogs. And again, no electricity or water 
for the grow workers.

The tents were only 200 feet from the picture window of the 
neighbors' house, a beautiful new home. I learned that the residents 
no longer take walks in the neighborhood because they have had pit 
bull attacks and threatening behavior from the growers who have moved 
in from out of county.

I was feeling pretty depressed with all I'd seen. I could well 
understand the sadness in my friend's face as we passed so much 
ruination of the beautiful Hayfork valley.

I asked him what he planned to do. He said he'd move if he could.

But all his money was tied up in his land and home. "It's not a place 
to raise your kids, now. And I hear that all the time from my friends 
and neighbors.

All I can say is, we have to raise awareness in the county about 
where we are headed with this marijuana problem.

I wish everyone could come and see what Hayfork is dealing with. And 
this isn't even Trinity Pines." Trinity Pines is a subdivision in 
Trinity County, about 45 minutes south of Hayfork. It has been taken 
over by marijuana growers, who have intimidated many of the original 
residents into fleeing. The Trinity Journal and the Sheriff's Report 
column regularly report the assaults, pit bull attacks, intimidation, 
gunpoint hold-ups, and unexplained deaths in the Pines. The land has 
been destroyed by clear-cutting for marijuana grows.

My friend won't drive there anymore, saying, "You don't want to go in 
there without an armed police escort."

As I drove back over Hayfork Summit, I felt low. I was glad to get 
back to the other side of the hill, to central Trinity County, where 
it looked so peaceful.

I thought of what so many people have called Trinity County - our 
Shangri-la. But I knew our lovely environment was already being 
compromised. There is significant damage to the land and water by 
unregulated and large-scale marijuana growing by out-of-county people.

The influx of nonresident growers and workers creates sanitation and 
safety issues.

This is happening countywide. And it is happening right in our 
residential neighborhoods. Most of us moved to Trinity County for the 
peace, safety and beauty of this area, for us and for our children.

We need to protect our Shangri-la by getting involved and making sure 
our county government knows we want them to take action on the 
explosion of commercial marijuana growing and the problems that come with it.

If you are concerned, do what I am doing: attend the Planning 
Commission and Board of Supervisors meetings and make your voice heard.

Evelyn Ward, an artist and educator, moved to Trinity County with her 
family from the San Francisco Bay area 25 years ago. She lives in Lewiston.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom