Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2010 Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI) Copyright: 2010 The Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.dailytribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579 Author: Catherine Kavanaugh LANDLORD ASKS CITY FOR RELIEF FROM MEDICAL POT BAN Growing Operation Proposed for Industrial District. ROYAL OAK -- A landlord unable to lease a building for two years is looking to medical marijuana for economic relief. James Canner, managing partner for AFKF, LLC, is asking the city to make an exception to its 180-day moratorium on medical marijuana facilities and consider a growing operation at 2521 Torquay, which is an industrial zone across from Cummingston Park. "The moratorium still is in place, but anyone who feels unfairly impacted by it can ask for a hearing," City Attorney David Gillam said. "This person is at risk of property foreclosure and he has a prospective tenant who wants to use it for a grow room for registered caregivers." The City Commission set a formal hearing on the request for exemption from the moratorium for Aug. 9. Canner said Wednesday that he never expected to be at the center of a growing controversy for medical marijuana. He has been called "the pot guy," which he said is a misnomer. "I'm only the landlord. I'm not in the business," Canner said. "Like other people out there with buildings, I'm looking for tenants. A guy wants to do this and I'm going through the steps to do it properly. I'm caught in the crosshairs." Canner also said he questions whether, if approved, the facility would be the largest medical marijuana warehouse of its kind in Michigan. Although his building is 23,000 square feet, he said the tenant is interested in using half of it. The potential tenant, David Greene, wants to operate a professional grow room facility for licensed caregivers. The gray concrete building would be divided and the caregivers would have their own locked spaces. No medical marijuana would be dispensed from the site and it would have 24-hour security. Only caregivers, who are allowed to grow for qualified patients, would come and go. Canner said he built the structure for a commercial tenant who went out of business and he has been unable to find another renter in a down economy with hundreds of other spaces available for lease. "I am currently under tremendous pressure to find a use for this building before the bank takes it back from me," Canner said in a letter to the city requesting the hearing. He also suggests Royal Oak consider cashing in on the emerging medical marijuana industry by charging an application fee for each caregiver and an annual license fee and tax the service. The new source of city revenue could save some police and firefighter jobs, Canner said. Like many cities, Royal Oak enacted a temporary ban on medical marijuana facilities to study where to allow them and how to regulate them. The moratorium expires in October, but has a provision that allows hearings in cases where deferring review and approval of a plan results in "denial of any viable economic use of property." The hearing for 2521 Torquay will be at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 9 at Royal Oak City Hall, 211 E. Williams St. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake