HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Healdsburg Wrestling With Pot-Growing Guidelines
Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jun 2013
Source: Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA)
Copyright: 2013 The Press Democrat
Contact:  http://www.pressdemocrat.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/348
Author: Clark Mason

HEALDSBURG WRESTLING WITH POT-GROWING GUIDELINES

In the heart of Wine Country, where harvest time produces pungent 
scents of fermenting grapes, the conversation these days is about 
another odor - that of skunk-like budding marijuana plants.

The harvest is still months away, but wine-centric Healdsburg is 
wrestling with guidelines for medical marijuana cultivation and 
whether to confine it indoors.

The intent behind keeping cultivation indoors is not only to suppress 
the smell, but to discourage burglaries and even violence.

Healdsburg would become the second city in Sonoma County behind 
Sebastopol to set rules for growing medical marijuana. But 
differences between the two towns and their divergent views toward 
pot was part of the sometimes impassioned discussion at last week's 
Healdsburg City Council meeting.

"In Sebastopol, they don't complain about the smell and in Healdsburg 
they do. And I'm not sure why," said Healdsburg Police Chief Kevin Burke.

Is it because of liberal, west county politics where Green Party 
candidates get more votes, the entire city of Sebastopol is 
designated a non-nuclear zone, and the top vote-getter in the last 
City Council election, Robert Jacob, was someone who operates a 
medical marijuana dispensary?

"Obviously there is a level of comfort here with medical marijuana 
that resulted in the electoral result," Sebastopol Police Chief Jeff 
Weaver said Thursday.

But he said there could be various reasons for the few complaints or 
problems associated with marijuana growing in Sebastopol, which 
allows up to 30 plants in gardens that can cover as much as 100 square feet.

"I don't know if people aren't growing as much, or maybe they're more 
discreet about it, or maybe people are more tolerant about it," Weaver said.

In response to perennial complaints about backyard marijuana gardens 
in Healdsburg, Police Chief Burke proposed guidelines that would 
allow only indoor cultivation, with grow lights. Patients could have 
up to 12 mature plants and 24 immature ones.

Although California voters approved the use of medical marijuana in 
1996, no standards were set on the numbers of plants or the amount of 
marijuana patients could possess and it has remained a murky issue.

The state, cities and counties have come up with different limits. 
But the state Supreme Court in 2010 in essence said the limits can be 
exceeded and patients can possess and cultivate as much as is 
"reasonably necessary" for their medical needs.

The Healdsburg Planning Commission unanimously endorsed the proposed 
cultivation ordinance, adding an air filter requirement in the home 
to keep the telltale plant odor from being detected by neighborhood 
children, or others tempted to steal the crop.

But after the proposal received publicity, marijuana advocates showed 
up in force at Monday's City Council public hearing to express their 
objections.

Some of those critical of Healdsburg's plans to prohibit outdoor 
gardens, or urging the City Council to study the issue further, 
included Sebastopol vice-mayor Jacob, executive director of the Peace 
in Medicine cannabis dispensary; former Sebastopol City Council 
members Craig Litwin and Linda Kelley; and former West County 
Supervisor Ernie Carpenter.

Many speakers urged Healdsburg officials to pass more liberal 
guidelines like those in Sebastopol and unincorporated parts of Sonoma County.

Jacob noted that his dispensaries have 36,750 registered patients in 
Sonoma County and 1,147 of them in the past five years have been from 
Healdsburg, which prohibits dispensaries, like most cities in the county.

But Healdsburg Councilman Shaun McCaffery said Healdsburg is 
different from Sebastopol and needs to craft its own ordinance. 
"People think differently in these two towns," he said.

With a slight hint of sarcasm, Healdsburg Councilman Gary Plass said 
he wanted to "thank all the speakers and everybody who gave their 
time to drive all the way from Sebastopol."

Plass added that the city was not trying to limit people who need 
medical marijuana, but was talking about putting the plants indoors 
to avoid the odor issue.

But being forced to grow indoors is a significant expense, especially 
for low-income patients who need it, according to critics.

"It forces people to pay for sunlight indoors, instead of using it 
for free outdoors," said former Sebastopol City Councilman Litwin.

"Why are people complaining about the smell?" said Martin Lee, a 
medical marijuana patient who lives in winery-studded Dry Creek Valley.

"I live near a winery. When it's harvest time, you smell the vinegar 
everywhere. I find that a lot more obnoxious than the smell of a 
marijuana plant," he said, arguing that the plant has medicinal 
terpenes that some people find pleasant. He said it only gives off an 
aroma as it begins to bud around mid-August, heading toward the fall harvest.

Lee, who has written a book on the social history of cannabis, said 
there is still a lot of prejudice, a "bigotry about the evil weed."

"People have been taught to hate marijuana and to fear it," he said.

But Joe Lickey, a Healdsburg resident, said he neither hates 
marijuana nor is afraid of it. He said his 6-year-old child did not 
want to play outside of their Prince Street home because of the smell 
from a neighbor's pot plants.

Lickey said people who need it should be able to get it at little or 
no cost. But he expressed objections to those who bend the rules to 
become medical marijuana patients, grow it in the backyard for 
profit, and attract thieves to steal it.

After more than 90 minutes of discussion, Healdsburg City Council 
members decided they needed more information and agreed to form a 
task force to come up with recommendations.

The tentative timeline is to come back to the City Council in late 
September or October, coincidentally just about the time of harvest.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom