Pubdate: Mon, 20 Aug 2007 Source: Bakersfield Californian, The (CA) Copyright: 2007 The Bakersfield Californian Contact: http://www.bakersfield.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/36 Author: James Burger, Californian Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) MEDICAL POT ADVOCATES SET TO PACK MEETING Medicinal marijuana problems should dominate the Tuesday morning session of the Kern County Board of Supervisors meeting. Medical pot advocates are calling for patients and activists to swarm to the meeting and share their concerns about the closure of marijuana dispensaries in Kern County. The dispensaries closed after federal raids on an Oildale dispensary. Now supervisors may have to change county ordinances to adapt to a conflict between state law and federal law on the issue of marijuana. Trashy compost Supervisors also will get a report on land use violations at the troubled Community Recycling Inc. composting facility near Lamont. The company was cited by the Kern County Environmental Health Department, in June, for spreading compost mixed with trash onto farm property the company owns near the composting plant. Now county Planning Department officials have noted that the composting facility itself is in violation of numerous conditions of its operation. Groundwater testing reports are not being submitted to the county and trucks are not being cleaned of dirt before they track it out on Wheeler Ridge Road, as required by the county, according to a report signed by Planning Director Ted James and Environmental Health Director Matt Constantine. In addition, the facility has taken piles of broken concrete and waste wallboard which Community Recycling is not allowed to accept under the county's conditional use permit, the report states. Supervisors will learn more about problems with the facility during their Tuesday afternoon session at 2 p.m. Public Health County administrators are recommending that supervisors split the top position at the Kern County Public Health Services department into two separate jobs. Former Kern County Health Officer Dr. B.A. Jinadu retired from his post earlier this year after revelations were made about excessive Medi-Cal payments that he collected through private clinics he ran while working for the county. The revelations cost him a new job in San Diego County. In the wake of his retirement, the county is reconsidering whether the Public Health Officer and the Director of Public Health should be held by the same person. Supervisors will discuss the issue during their afternoon meeting Tuesday. Kern Medical Center They also will review a plan to move Kern Medical Center's collections, admitting and medical records systems back into county control. Currently those systems at the county-owned hospital are handled by a consultant. County staff estimate the county could save $2.4 million a year by doing the work themselves. The issue is on the agenda for the board's morning meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake