Pubdate: Thu, 04 Feb 2016
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Column: The 420
Copyright: 2016 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: Ngaio Bealum

OIL PRODUCERS GETS SHATTERED

I heard a club got raided the other day? I thought raids were a thing 
of the past. What gives?

- -Blue Steele

Close. It wasn't a cannabis club that got raided, but a cannabis 
processing facility. Med West Distribution (which makes stuff for the 
Bhang line of cannabis products) in San Diego was raided by by the 
local cops, apparently acting on an "anonymous tip." Two people were 
arrested and charged with manufacturing an illegal substance and 
manufacturing an illegal substance with intent to sell. Local 
advocates were surprised that Med West got raided, considering that 
Med West has been operating at the same spot in San Diego for a few 
years, and local officials had recently toured the facility.

This is a huge drag, of course. No one should ever go to jail for 
anything cannabis-related. However, California law is very clear: 
Making cannabis concentrates with butane or CO2 or anything other 
than water is against the law. The law was originally aimed at the 
folks who make meth, but the cops use this law against concentrate 
manufacturers all the time. Usually, they go after whatever dumbass 
set a house on fire by filling an unventilated room with butane, not 
established industrial producers, but the law is the law. 
Fortunately, there is language in the new medical marijuana laws that 
allow for the production of things like wax and shatter. Hopefully, 
people being arrested for making quality cannabis products in a safe 
and controlled environment will soon be a thing of the past.

Any news from the Legislature? You think these bans will end soon?

- -Wonk A. Tania

I will say this: The California Legislature has done a decent job of 
trying to fix its mistake. We will see if it does any good. The House 
and the Senate just passed Assembly Bill 21, which removes the 
deadline for cities and counties to have regulations or bans in place 
by March 1. Gov. Jerry Brown is expected to sign the bill. Cities can 
still ban anything cannabis-related, but now they can do it slowly 
and after great deliberation. Let's talk about this for a minute. Why 
should cities and counties be allowed to ban medical cannabis at all? 
If Proposition 215 is supposed to guarantee safe access to everyone 
in the state, shouldn't all the cities and counties have to allow it? 
Bud Green, Fresno-based activist and all-around good person, has a 
good idea: We have to convince the Legislature that cannabis is a 
statewide concern. California needs to set default regulations that 
the cities and counties must follow. Sure, they can have more liberal 
rules, like Oakland's 99 plant limit. (The default is six.) It would 
be unfair for the state to have to share cannabis money with 
ungrateful NIMBYS-after all, Colorado just hit $900 million in sales. 
Think of what Cali can do.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom