Pubdate: Thu, 2 Oct 2008 Source: Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA) Copyright: 2008 The Press Democrat Contact: http://www.pressdemo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/348 Author: Clark Mason, The Press Democrat Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia) WINDSOR SMOKE SHOP IGNITES FUROR Council Imposes Moratorium on Businesses It Deems Undesirable Near Downtown Windsor has decided to "just say no" for the time being to any new smoke shops that sell drug paraphernalia. The Smoke Shop, which opened in early September, sells fancy bongs and pipes used to smoke marijuana. But some critics say the smaller glass pipes in the store are also used to smoke methamphetamine. Alarmed by a smoke shop, or "head shop," that recently opened in a prominent spot in Town Green Village, the Town Council voted unanimously Wednesday to impose an immediate 45-day moratorium on any new ones, as well as a variety of other types of businesses. Those include check-cashing stores, pawn shops, tattoo parlors and bail bonds businesses, which Windsor officials see as potentially damaging to the family-friendly atmosphere they want to encourage. The intent is to allow Windsor to develop zoning regulations and conditions on those businesses, prohibit them or keep them out of certain areas like the new downtown. The moratorium could be extended another 22 months while Windsor crafts the zoning regulations. "It's clearly not a desirable business in that area," Councilman Warin Parker said of the smoke shop that opened next to Patterson's Pub. He noted that it's also near a child-care center and "a quarter-mile from the high school." "Get rid of the smoke shop any way you can," resident Christopher Delacruz told the council. "Buy up the lease. I see kids walk by there all the time. It's degrading the whole town." His comments reflected the sentiments of most of the three dozen people who showed up for Wednesday's council meeting at Town Hall. By the end of the night, council members said they were willing to explore spending redevelopment money to buy out the smoke shop lease, which is a one-year minimum. Council members also want to revisit the idea of requiring business licenses in town, something that they have rejected in the past because it is viewed by critics as simply another tax. Parker said that a business license would provide more teeth, unlike the current voluntary business registration process. But a few others said Windsor was being too heavy handed by lumping a half dozen types of businesses into the moratorium. "The council needs to let Windsor find its own identity. If a business doesn't mesh with the people who live in Windsor, it will fail," said Pamela Pizzimenti, a Windsor mother of four children. She said the town's moratorium is too sweeping, and officials are trying to pass moral judgement by, for example, saying that a family that has tattoos is undesirable. The Smoke Shop, which opened in early September, sells fancy bongs and pipes used to smoke marijuana. But some critics say the smaller glass pipes in the store are also used to smoke methamphetamine. The store owners, brothers Sam and Basam Khouri, have said they are following the law and that all items in the store are for tobacco use. They did not attend the meeting. There are at least a half dozen similar stores in Santa Rosa, and while they have existed for decades around the state, the smoke shop touched a nerve in Windsor. "This caught us off guard," Councilwoman Robin Goble said. The store is on a prominent corner of Windsor Road. The store's inventory of pipes and hookahs was still in relatively plain view this week through the open door and windows, despite some window blinds. While the store prohibits anyone under 18 from entering, opponents of the store say the drug merchandise can be seen by the many students strolling to and from nearby Windsor High School. After Wednesday night's meeting, some opponents said they went by the smoke shop and claimed to have spotted at least four underage kids inside the store, their skateboards outside. Virtually all the calls and scores of e-mails to the town have been against the smoke shop, expressing, disapproval, even shock and outrage that the business was allowed to open in such a visible spot. In a letter to the local newspaper, Windsor resident Brad Sherwood said the location was an embarrassment to the residents and business community. The motto on a billboard promoting the Town Green reads "Live.Work.Play." It might as well state, "Smoke Green on the Town Green," Sherwood said. Opponents say the store invites drug users and drug dealers from neighboring towns to Windsor, creating a cycle of criminal activity. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake