Pubdate: Fri, 23 Apr 2010 Source: Red Bluff Daily News (CA) Copyright: 2010 Red Bluff Daily News Contact: http://redbluffdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1079 Author: Geoff Johnson CORNING DEFENDS CITATIONS ISSUED TO COLLECTIVE CORNING - The city will argue a marijuana collective was not allowed under its code even before it issued a temporary ban on such organizations in a pending court case. Tehama Herbal Collective owners Ken and Kathy Prather have continually received citations since they opened the collective on Solano Street. Previously, the Prathers' lawyer, Bill Panzer, issued a demurrer stating he would fight the citations by arguing the city's ban on dispensaries, collectives and other marijuana operations is unconstitutional. The city has the right to control where collectives are erected, but not to ban them altogether, he said. But, according to a response filed by City Attorney Michael Fitzpatrick, the Prathers were never cited for violating the ban. The citations were issued because the Prathers never obtained a use permit from the city, nor did they ask it to zone an area for medical marijuana collectives. "Rather than follow administrative procedures...[the Prathers] chose to simply "do business' in the zone they selected as best suiting their needs and thumb their noses at City Hall," according to Fitzpatrick's response dated April 5. Fitzpatrick defends the city's prohibition on marijuana collectives as a temporary measure. Legally, the city allows temporary prohibitions on land use not already permitted by the local government for a period up to two years, according to the response. Fitzpatrick compares the relationship between California's marijuana laws and city zoning ordinances to churches, nuclear power plants and livestock auction yards, all of which must comply with local policies. "These types of proposed uses, just like some types of medical marijuana activities, are clearly legal," he writes. "But just because they are "legal' doesn't mean that the jurisdiction must allow them to go into any geographic area, regardless of their impacts on surrounding uses of property and on the people surrounding those neighboring properties." California law is clear that, when state law does not address zoning or land use, cities will be given the right to regulate land use, Fitzpatrick argues. The Prathers are scheduled to be arraigned May 4. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake