Pubdate: Fri, 12 Dec 2008 Source: Times-Standard (Eureka, CA) Copyright: 2008 Times-Standard Contact: http://www.times-standard.com/writeus Website: http://www.times-standard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1051 Author: Jessie Faulkner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) BINNIE IS TRINIDAD'S NEW MAYOR Stan Binnie is Trinidad's new mayor. The council voted unanimously Wednesday to appoint Binnie as mayor. At the same time, the council chose Kathy Bhardwaj as the mayor pro-tem and bid farewell to long-time councilman and Mayor Chi-Wei Lin. Although newly elected City Councilman Mike Morgan had stated his interest in serving as the city's mayor on his recently launched blog, he did not put his name forward at the meeting, according to City Clerk Gabriel Adams. The council also took the opportunity to honor outgoing councilman and Mayor Chi-Wei Lin with both a resolution and refreshments. Although the council discussed the process for making committee and commission assignments, Adams said that won't actually happen until the council meets again in January. That same meeting should see appointment of planning commissioners. Adams said the mayor will make the appointments to the three vacant seats on the planning commission and the council will uphold or reject those suggestions. The council also discussed a report from Police Chief Ken Thrailkill on the existence of marijuana-growing operations within the city limits this year. A total of six search warrants were issued for locations in the city this year and the cases of those arrested were forwarded to the District Attorney's Office for prosecution, the police chief said. Thrailkill outlined how marijuana cultivation impacts the city, from having fewer homes for families and increasing the threat of home invasion robberies to prompting more drug trafficking. Most such operations occur in rental homes, the chief's report stated, an action that can put those properties at risk of forfeiture. Many of the growing operations come with significant alterations to rental properties, the chief said. Restoring the homes to their original state can run into thousands of dollars. The police chief also pointed out the lack of city ordinances dealing with marijuana dispensaries and the fact that no city regulation is in place to deal with the use of homes to grow medical marijuana beyond the legal limit. Thrailkill recommended that the city manager and the City Council review existing ordinances and possibly create new regulations for dealing with the issues surrounding marijuana cultivation. The council, Adams said, considered some of the chief's recommendations and will discuss them further in the future. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin