Pubdate: Wed, 09 Dec 2009 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2009 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Scott Mobley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MARIJUANA CULTIVATION RULES ENDORSED IN REDDING Redding inched closer Tuesday to enacting comprehensive regulations on medical marijuana cultivation and cannabis club locations when the Planning Commission voted to endorse new zoning. The commission's vote is merely a recommendation to the City Council, which must ultimately approve the zoning. The city would allow outdoor and indoor medical marijuana cultivation for qualified patients under the proposed zoning, but limit the size and location of the grows. Redding would restrict outdoor gardens to 100 square feet of canopy and allow them only in backyards and interior side yards 30 feet from the nearest neighbor. The city also would limit plant heights to 8 feet and require a 6-foot-tall fence around crops. A couple of commissioners thought a 10-foot-by-10-foot garden might be too small, and noted the city would review the ordinance in six months. Redding would limit indoor gardens to 100 square feet of canopy or 10 percent of the home, whichever was larger. The city also would require a certified electrician to sign off on any electrical loads for cultivation larger than 1,200 watts. Finally, the city would limit new medicinal cannabis clubs to heavy commercial and general commercial zones on the city outskirts, under the proposed zoning. Commission votes on yard setbacks for outdoor grows and zoning restrictions for cannabis clubs were nearly unanimous, with only Emmett Burroughs dissenting. Burroughs favored tighter limits on clubs and an outdoor cultivation ban. The commission nearly split on cultivation standards, voting 4-3. Some commissioners, like Burroughs, favored tighter restrictions, while others, like Cameron Middleton, worried a city requirement that growers for collectives sign an affidavit with the development services director could compromise privacy. Commissioners defended the proposed zoning as a reasonable middle ground after hearing from more than a half-dozen speakers, most of whom criticized the zoning as too restrictive and invasive. Several speakers were especially upset about the limits on outdoor cultivation for personal use, noting they could not afford to grow indoors or to join a cannabis club. "I think this whole thing has been blown out of proportion," James Benno said. "What if I don't like tomatoes and I find four others who don't like tomatoes? Can we vote out tomato growing in Redding?" Others said Redding's regulations violate Proposition 215, California's Compassionate Use Law, and promised a class-action lawsuit against the city. Commissioners generally praised the regulations after picking them apart line by line over the course of three meetings. "We want as much as possible to allow people to use marijuana medically if they have a legitimate recommendation," Commissioner Lynne Wonacott said. "Our goal is the health and safety of you and your neighbors and the city as a whole. Is it a perfect system? No, but we are not like other communities that have tried to shut the whole thing down." The zoning restrictions endorsed by commissioners Tuesday complement cannabis club regulations adopted Dec. 1 by the council that are set to take effect in January. Collectives must allow the police chief access to their records so authorities can determine whether the clubs serve qualified medical marijuana patients under the new regulations. The city also will require doctors to specify amounts in their medical marijuana recommendations to collective members, limit cannabis sales to dried buds and ask members to verify that they don't belong to more than one collective in Shasta County. These regulations are designed to weed out profit-driven dope dealers from legitimate medical marijuana collectives, which are supposed to be nonprofit, Redding officials have said. Officials expect many of Redding's estimated 20 to 30 clubs to shut down next year, once the new rules take effect. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D