Board begins
talks on marijuana issues
By KATIE MINTZ
Ukiah Daily
Journal
07/25/2006
Told it should
set growing limits
Described at
its outset as an "informative and educational discussion focusing on local
county impacts of marijuana in our community" by Jennifer Wyatt of the
county executive office, the Board of Supervisors' Marijuana Workshop on Monday
left nearly as many questions as were answered.
The meeting,
held in a cramped conference room filled by nearly 40 audience members at
times, covered a wide array of marijuana-related topics including the
differentiation of issues surrounding marijuana for medicinal purposes and its
illegal counterpart.
At its
conclusion, the Board of Supervisors asked the county executive office to work
with County Counsel to prepare an outline of what was said at the five-hour
meeting and make recommendations as to what possible actions the board could
take in the future regarding a number of the concerns considered during
discussion.
Some of the
medicinal marijuana-related issues included whether or not the Board should
create countywide policies defining the allowed locations for dispensaries and
gardens, what "seriously ill" as stated in the State's Compassionate
Use Act of 1996 means, and the amount those with doctors' recommendations can
rightfully possess.
The
Compassionate Use Act (Proposition 215), which gives "seriously ill"
patients and their caregivers the right to cultivate and possess marijuana,
allows for counties and cities to pass guidelines exceeding its limits of 8
ounces of dried marijuana and six mature or 12 immature plants in maximum
possession per patient.
District
Attorney Norm Vroman said that Mendocino County does not prosecute medical
marijuana patients or their caregivers that possess no more than a growth
canopy of 100 square feet and 2 pounds of dried marijuana, figures that were specified
by Vroman and former Sheriff Tony Craver.
County Counsel
Jeanine Nadel, however, suggested that per SB 420, a 2003 bill that addressed
anomalies in the Act, county limits should be set by the supervisors.
"Since SB
420, it's really now up to the Board of Supervisors to adopt by resolution any
guidelines that exceed what's currently in the code, and that hasn't happened
yet," Nadel said. "I would strongly recommend that you have a
discussion with the sheriff and district attorney about that."
In the realm
of the illegal marijuana industry, which Supervisor Hal Wagenet estimated
accounted for 90 to 99 percent of all marijuana grown in the county,
environmental and public safety issues were discussed.
While both
Sgt. Rusty Noe, commander of the County of Mendocino Marijuana Eradication Team, and Assistant Agricultural
Commissioner Tony Linegar were hesitant to put a dollar amount on the marijuana
industry in Mendocino County, some gave an estimate of $1.5 billion. The impact
on the environment is also great, John Rogers, director of environmental health
for the Mendocino County Department of Public Health, said.
According to
Rogers, large marijuana farming operations often use diesel-powered generators
to run growing lights. The diesel, usually stored in tanks meant for other purposes,
can leak and cause soil contamination and water contamination. In one instance,
it cost $650,000 to remove 200 truckloads of contaminated soil.
Many county
departments present at the workshop also spoke to safety issues related to
marijuana farms. Marsha Wharff, speaking on behalf of the Assessor's Office,
and Chief Probation Officer Wes Forman cited concerns of going into the public
-- especially rural areas -- with marked county cars for fear of negative
response by marijuana farm operators. Director of Public Health Carol Mordhorst
also mentioned the dangers that pit bulls used to guard farms present, saying
that those that escape or are let loose after harvesting injure people and livestock.
Many members
of the public spoke and asked questions of the county officials and city
representatives such as Willits City Manager Ross Walker and Ukiah City
Councilman John McCowen that spoke at the workshop. Both Willits and Ukiah have
implemented zoning ordinances restricting the growth of medicinal marijuana to
indoors in city limits.
Chairman of
the Board Supervisor David Colfax suggested the county not take on issues out
of its control and deal with problems in the county a piece at a time.
"We are
getting into a very difficult area when we start taking on the medical problems
of medical marijuana and the criminal problems of criminal marijuana and start
mixing them up, so lets delineate sets of problems that we need to deal with
and go at it full speed, but with all deliberate speed," Colfax said.
Colfax said he
would set a date for further discussion after receiving options for action from
the County Executive Office and County Counsel.
Katie Mintz
can be reached at udjkm@pacific.net.
County to
explore marijuana's impact
Ukiah Daily
Journal Staff
7/23/2006
On Monday, the
Mendocino County Board of Supervisors will hold a
Marijuana
Workshop to review the legal, social, environmental and financial impacts the
local industry has on the county. According to the agenda, the board hopes to
"determine appropriate and effective local actions in response."
The workshop
will begin at 9 a.m. in Conference Room C at the County
Administration
Center, 501 Low Gap Road, Ukiah, and is expected to end by noon. The workshop
will also be televised on Channel 3 beginning at approximately 9 a.m.
The agenda for
the workshop was discussed at the June 27 Board of
Supervisors
meeting where Director of Public Health Carol Mordhorst suggested that issues
regarding the use of medical marijuana be separated from those of illegal
marijuana farming.
The agenda is
as follows:
1.
Introduction/Review of Workshop Agenda
2. Legal
Overview:
State Law
Proposition
215
Proposition
420
Federal Law
3. Current
County Policy and Practices:
Medical
Marijuana Cards
Enforcement
Prosecution
Treatment
4. Impacts on
Mendocino County
5. Public
Expression/Comment
6. Issues for
Local Control:
Environment
Quantities
Allowed/Tolerated
Quality/Purity/Technical
Advising
Dispensaries
Fees and
Taxation
7. Follow
Through:
County Policy
Development
Legislative
Advocacy
Regional
Consultation
Action Steps
8. Adjournment