Pubdate: Sun, 08 Aug 2010 Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT) Copyright: 2010 The Billings Gazette Contact: http://billingsgazette.com/app/contact/?contact=letter Website: http://www.billingsgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/515 Author: Matt Hagengruber CITY COUNCIL TO ADDRESS NEW POT RULES One of the most controversial issues before the Billings City Council in years returns Monday night for another vote. The council is set to discuss new rules on where medical-marijuana businesses can operate and will ask the city Zoning Commission to take over the process for now. The council meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. in council chambers at City Hall, 220 N. 27th St. By May, the city had issued nearly 80 business licenses for medical-marijuana businesses, which caused uproar among those opposed to medical marijuana. In May, the council approved a six-month moratorium on new medical-marijuana businesses while it figured out how to regulate them. Zoning rules are the city's biggest tool in controlling medical-marijuana businesses, so the council set up an ad hoc committee to look at ways to zone the businesses. The committee finished its work in July and presented its recommendation to the council later that month. The committee recommended allowing medical-marijuana businesses in only a few industrial parts of the city and requiring special reviews in some cases before the businesses could open. The committee also recommended that signage be restricted, and that existing businesses be given four years to comply with any new rules that are passed. The council tonight won't be voting on new zoning rules and won't hold a public hearing on the matter. Instead, council members will decide what kind of new zoning rules they want for medical marijuana, and will ask the city Zoning Commission and city staff to prepare the new rules for the council to approve. The council isn't bound to follow the findings of the ad hoc committee. The council could ask the Zoning Commission to consider the committee's recommendation, or it could ask the commission to prepare an outright ban on medical-marijuana businesses in the city. The council could also seek an extension of the moratorium, which expires in November. Once the council decides what kind of new zoning rules it wants, city staffers will draft the rules and the Zoning Commission will hold a public hearing and vote on them before sending them back to the council. The Zoning Commission will do its work in September, and the council will vote on the new rules at the end of September. The council will also consider a 1-mill levy request for the Planning Division. Last month, Yellowstone County commissioners decided not to place a mill levy increase for the Planning Division on the ballot this fall, despite significant support from the City Council. The city and county share the Planning Division, but much of its work is inside city limits. Now, council members want to bypass the commissioners and place the mill-levy increase only on city ballots. If the council approves the resolution tonight and voters approve it in the fall, the city's charter will be amended to include a permanent 1-mill levy for planning services. One mill would raise an additional $159,000 a year for planning services in the city. The owner of a $200,000 home in the city would see a tax increase of about $2.82 a year, for a total of $6.26 a year in taxes paid toward planning services. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D