Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jul 2010 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Pueblo Chieftain Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: Peter Roper TAYLOR WANTS COUNTY VOTE ON MED POT CENTERS Only hours after City Council voted down a similar idea, Pueblo County Sheriff Kirk Taylor asked the county commissioners Tuesday morning to let county voters decide whether to allow medical marijuana centers in the county. It may be a case of trying to close the corral after the horses are already loose because the county's planning department received 17 applications to operate marijuana centers as of July 1. That was the state's deadline for marijuana centers to demonstrate some kind of local government approval in order to continue to operate until state licenses are available next summer. Six of the county applications came from centers already doing business. Taylor told the commissioners Tuesday that law enforcement is still caught between state law -- which allows medical marijuana -- and federal law which continues to define it as a restricted and otherwise illegal drug. He noted that new state laws on medical marijuana allows local governments to ban the centers in their jurisdictions. "It's been 10 years since county voters spoke on the subject, so I would ask you to put it on the ballot," Taylor said, referring to the 1999 state ballot question that legalized medical marijuana. In that election, however, a majority of Pueblo County voters rejected the amendment. Taylor's request didn't get much of a reception from the commissioners, who pointed out that a narrow majority of City Council voted down a similar idea at Monday night's meeting. "I think we agree that the city and county need to talk about this," Commission Chairman Jeff Chostner replied to Taylor. "We don't want to be creating conflicting regulations." Whatthe commissioners did Tuesday was to hear a land-use proposal from the planning department that would restrict marijuana centers and the sale of marijuana products to county land with a B-4 business zone. People interested in also growing marijuana at a center would be limited to A-1 and A-2 agricultural zones. In both cases, such businesses would be allowed "by right" in those zones, as long as other local and state licenses were obtained. The commissioners agreed to postpone final action on that zoning ordinance for two weeks. Several Colorado City residents urged the commissioners to modify that proposal to establish a 1,000-foot buffer between any growing operation and nearby residential areas. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt