Pubdate: Mon, 06 Dec 2010
Source: Vail Daily (CO)
Copyright: 2010 Vail Daily
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wo3Ts7AI
Website: http://www.vaildaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3233
Author: Sarah Mausolf
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?277 (Cannabis - Medicinal -  Colorado)

EAGLE COUNTY SEES GROWING TREND

Growing Your Own Medical Marijuana Has Been Legal for a Decade but 
It's More Common Than Ever

EAGLE COUNTY, Colorado -- In 2007, police discovered a man had been 
growing two pot plants in his Avon home and playing classical music to them.

That was the most ominous "growing operation" the Eagle County 
Sheriff's Office busted that year.

In fact, it was the only growing operation police responded to that year.

Fast forward to this year, and the Sheriff's Office has already 
investigated a dozen growing operations.

It seems more and more people in Eagle County are applying their 
green thumbs to growing medical marijuana. It's legal in some cases, 
but police say plenty of people aren't playing by the rules.

"We're starting to see major quantities," said an undercover 
sheriff's office deputy who asked to remain anonymous. "It's not just 
a guy with his few plants in his closet for his own use. We've had a 
couple in the past few years that have been in excess of 300 plants."

Police are also noticing more people growing medical marijuana in their homes.

"There are inherent dangers with those," the deputy said. "I've never 
been to a grow yet where they've done the electrical or the water up 
to code. A lot of the time there are multiple extension cords and 
water laying around. They're fire hazards."

Also, a relatively new state law allows only dispensaries to run 
commercial growing operations. Dispensaries are required to grow 70 
percent of their pot. Any marijuana they don't grow themselves has to 
come from another dispensary.

However, the undercover officer said the law isn't discouraging 
illegal growers from attempting to supply dispensaries. With some 
dispensaries struggling to grow enough marijuana to meet their 
demand, he thinks Mexican drug traffickers and other criminals could 
spot an opportunity.

"Last month we arrested a gentleman in Gypsum on I-70 who had 40 
pounds of marijuana in his car and the way it was packaged, we're 
confident it was destined for a dispensary," the deputy said.

In Eagle, police have been cracking down on illegal growing 
operations as well in recent months.

However, Chief Rodger McLaughlin said police are not going after the 
average patients who are simply growing a few plants. Colorado law 
allows patients with medical marijuana cards to grow six plants, 
while "caregivers" can grow as many as six plants each for five patients.

"They're protected by the Constitution," McLaughlin said. "They're 
not on our radar screen."

Growing at home

To get a sense of how many patients are growing marijuana off the 
"radar screen," I stopped into High County Hydroponics gardening shop in Eagle.

Owner Cheri Stone said about 75 percent of her business involves 
people are looking to buy supplies for growing medical marijuana.

While a different garden shop in the area has posted a sign 
forbidding customers from talking about medical marijuana in the 
store, citing the federal laws that consider marijuana illegal, Stone 
hasn't gone that route.

"I see no reason why I can't legally discuss it, as long as it's in 
legal parameters," she said.

Although sustainable farming is the focus of her store, she's fine 
with providing customers with supplies for their pot plants -- unless 
she suspects they're up to something illegal.

Just how many people in Eagle County are growing marijuana?

"I think a helluva lot more than you could imagine and you would be 
surprised who," Stone said.

Most of this growing in basements, bedrooms and backyards is taking 
place under a veil of secrecy. Patients keep their plants under wraps 
for fear their reputations or security could be at stake.

Towns tackle laws

With the growing trend taking root, towns are wrestling with new laws 
for how to govern it.

On Dec. 14, Eagle County commissioners plan to discuss the county's 
medical marijuana laws. The county is considering a licensing program 
for medical marijuana businesses that will addresses commercial growers.

That same day, the Eagle town board plans to consider new rules for 
growing marijuana in residential neighborhoods. It would limit the 
number of people who can grow in a residential unit to one patient, 
or a caregiver servicing a single patient. It would also confine 
those grows to 150 square feet for a single family home or 100 square 
feet for a multi-family home.

In March, Eagle adopted a law limiting commercial growing operations 
to those run by approved dispensaries within the town of Eagle. So 
far, the only approved commercial growing operation belongs to the 
owner of the Sweet Leaf Pioneer dispensary on Chambers Avenue.

"We had a number of people interested in establishing growing 
operations within the town where the dispensaries were located 
upvalley," town manager Willy Powell said. "We just didn't want to 
become an agricultural center for the upvalley or anywhere else, for 
that matter."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom