Pubdate: Thu, 09 Nov 2000 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2000 Contra Costa Newspapers Inc. Address: 2640 Shadelands Drive, Walnut Creek, CA 94598 Feedback: http://www.contracostatimes.com/contact_us/letters.htm Website: http://www.contracostatimes.com/ Forum: Justin Pritchard, Associated Press Bookmark: CA: http://www.mapinc.org/props/ca/ ONE COUNTY GOES TO POT Mendocino County is first in nation to legalize marijuana growing; each resident can raise 25 plants UKIAH -- Voters in Mendocino County decided it's high time to partially decriminalize their most valuable cash crop -- marijuana -- in the first such ballot measure in the nation. Measure G allows residents of the verdant county on the North Coast to cultivate up to 25 marijuana plants apiece. The initiative faced no organized opposition and passed Tuesday with 58 percent of the vote. A handful of liberal college towns such as Berkeley; Ann Arbor, Mich.; and Amherst, Mass., have decriminalized smoking marijuana, Mendocino becomes the first community to sanction growing it, according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. But is the grass really greener the other side of Election Day? Measure G doesn't mean marijuana is completely legal in Mendocino County now -- state and federal drug laws still apply, as well as the limitation to 25 plants. The perception that locals can grow with impunity simply is not true. "There are people, when we catch them, they're going to give that 'Why are you guys doing this to us?' line," said Mendocino County Sheriff Tony Craver, who signed a petition to put Measure G on the ballot but ended up opposing the initiative. "I'm worried about the frustration and heartaches it's going to cause." Law enforcement may not be the only barrier to the county's green thumbs -- marijuana bandits, sometimes heavily armed, still will raid growing patches. "People think they can grow in their front yards, and it ain't gonna happen," said John Heubel, 37, a Measure G backer who said he has harvested 20 plants a year. "They're still going to get ripped off." Indeed, marijuana is big and sometimes dangerous business because Mendocino County is ground zero for some of the most sought-after marijuana grown by man. It's not just the quality; this region produces an annual marijuana crop estimated near $1 billion. But it wasn't the commercial growers that pushed Measure G. In fact, some backers say, the big-time operations don't like Measure G because it likely will increase the local marijuana supply and hurt their profits. At present, the potent green bud fetches more than gold: An ounce can cost $400 on the street. "I'm sure there were a few growers who kicked in 10 or 20 bucks to the campaign," said Dan Hamburg, a former Democratic congressman and leading backer of the initiative. "But this thing was not financed by growers, because they like things the way they are." With a mere smattering of opposition, the most vocal from local educators, Measure G backers aired four radio ads. The message in that $7,000 campaign, Hamburg said, was not that marijuana is a basic human right, but rather that government has no business in a grower's back yard. "This is a political statement," said Hamburg, whose own marijuana plot was raided last month, two days after he showed it to a CNN television crew. "It will spread and eventually we'll stop this harmful and ridiculous war on drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake