Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jul 2010 Source: Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) Copyright: 2010 MaineToday Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.kjonline.com/readerservices/Send_a_Letter_to_the_Editor-KJ.html Website: http://www.kjonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1405 Author: Keith Edwards IN THE POT ZONE AUGUSTA -- A zone change that would allow a medical marijuana dispensary to locate at a Middle Road property faces a public hearing tonight. In June, city councilors approved medical marijuana dispensary zoning rules to limit the location of such facilities to the city's medical district. The district surrounds the Harold Alfond Center for Cancer Care and proposed site of a new MaineGeneral Medical Center hospital off Old Belgrade Road in north Augusta. The Planning Board is currently considering a proposal to expand the medical district to include a larger area of land along Old Belgrade Road. The proposed expanded zone would include a 10 Middle Road property at Old Belgrade Road that Northeast Patients Group is considering as a potential site for a regional medical marijuana dispensary. The state awarded Northeast Patients Group a license to establish a medical marijuana dispensary in the region including Kennebec and Somerset counties. The property, a vacant, two-story metal-sided building listed as for sale or lease, is not within the city's current medical district. But maps of the proposed new, expanded medical district indicate the proposed dispensary property would be within the new zone, city attorney Stephen Langsdorf told councilors recently. Matt Nazar, deputy development director for the city, said it's a coincidence the Planning Board is considering zoning change to expand the district while the site being considered for a dispensary currently is beyond the zone's boundary. The city's most recent comprehensive plan, adopted in 2007, says medical and other nonresidential uses in the north Augusta area "... should continue to be encouraged." And Nazar said planners have talked for years about an expanded medical district in that area, before the new state law allowing medical marijuana dispensaries came along. "It's completely coincidental it's happening at this same time," Nazar said. Some neighbors to the site have expressed concerns about the building possibly being used to distribute medical marijuana. In Waterville -- the other city in the running for a dispensary in the state's Kennebec-Somerset region -- lawmakers last week unanimously passed a six-month moratorium on siting such a facility. The council must take two more votes to finalize a moratorium. The Augusta Planning Board is scheduled to hold a public hearing on the rezoning proposal at its meeting tonight, which begins at 7 in the lecture hall at Augusta City Center. However, there's a chance the board may not get that far: The zoning change proposal is the last of five items on the agenda tonight. Board policy states applications will be heard in order until 10 p.m., after which any review not started will be tabled to a future meeting. Prior to the rezoning public hearing, board members are scheduled to: * Hold a public hearing to discuss the issue of noise from logging and other forestry operations and investigate how concerns about noise from such sites might be addressed. Some residents have complained to city officials about logging operations making noise near their homes early in the morning. * Discuss firewood processing in rural districts in the city. * Hold a public hearing regarding an application from Cynthia Cipriano to operate a retail business, selling used household items at her residence near the intersection of Civic Center Drive and Bog Road. * Hold a public hearing regarding a proposed change in use, from Gale Loveitt, from a vacant restaurant to a parking lot and used car dealership at 807 Riverside Drive. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D