Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jul 2010 Source: Oakland Tribune, The (CA) Copyright: 2010 Bay Area News Group Contact: http://www.insidebayarea.com/feedback/tribune Website: http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 OAKLAND PUSHES LEGAL ENVELOPE WITH POT FACTORIES IN JULY of 2009, Oakland became the first city in the U.S. to tax the sale of medical marijuana. Now, exactly a year later, the City Council has taken another major step on the road toward outright legalization. The council has voted to license four new industrial-sized marijuana farms in the city. These so-called Walmarts of pot will be authorized to grow and process marijuana to sell to the four city-approved medical cannabis dispensaries. The ordinance must be read at a meeting a second time before it becomes law, which is expected Tuesday. For the privilege of obtaining a coveted "Cannabis Cultivation, Manufacturing and Processing Facility" permit, applicants will pay a $5,000 fee. The winners will each pay $211,000 per year to the city, which will be used to hire staff and develop a program to oversee the cultivators. Meanwhile, the council is considering a proposal to institute a 2.5 percent tax on medical marijuana dispensaries and as much as 8 percent on pot growers. Should California voters approve Proposition 19, which would allow marijuana consumption for recreational use, the city would levy up to a 10 percent tax on recreational pot sellers. City Council members Rebecca Kaplan and Larry Reid co-authored the cultivation ordinance. Both have cast it as a public-safety measure. Reid said the new regulations would ensure that medical marijuana patients receive a high-quality product grown at a safe facility. That the regulations would cut down on the increasing number of fires, robberies and shootings that have been occurring at homes and warehouses operated by small growers. Kaplan echoed Reid's assertions and said the ordinance would provide good-paying jobs and bring in revenue for public safety. The at-large-councilwoman also authored the new tax proposal which the council is scheduled to take up tonight. Yet what city officials aren't saying is that moving ahead to license large-scale production plants, coupled with a proposal to levy new pot taxes, puts Oakland on shaky legal ground. The fact is, the sale or use of marijuana for any purpose is still illegal under federal law - regardless of California law allowing the sale and use of marijuana for medicinal purposes. Last year, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder ordered the Drug Enforcement Agency to halt the Bush administration's policy of raiding state-sanctioned medical marijuana dispensaries. Yet that could easily change should the feds perceive that Oakland is attempting to legalize recreational marijuana use through the back door. Nancy Nadel, who voted against the cultivation ordinance, was the only council member to raise the critical issue that it is illegal under federal law. She urged her fellow council members to hold off until after November - - after California voters have decided Prop. 19. We think she was right to do so. Instead, council members insisted that Oakland had to "seize the opportunity" to become the epicenter of the emerging medical cannabis growing industry. Oakland is certainly in dire financial straits. Yet do residents really want their city to become the pot capital of the country? - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D