Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 Source: Red Bluff Daily News (CA) Copyright: 2010 Red Bluff Daily News Contact: http://redbluffdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1079 Author: Geoff Johnson TEHAMA COUNTY TO MULL POT RULE EXTENSION Tehama County staff members are expected Tuesday to recommend a one-year extension on a controversial medical marijuana dispensary and collective ban. The Board of Supervisors is scheduled to convene at 1:30 p.m. in its chambers, 727 Oak St., to consider renewing the ban, which would otherwise expire. If the county approves the extension, it would be the last time it is allowed to do so. California law allows an interim ordinance to be extended twice without invoking a more complicated legal process associated with permanent zoning policies. The ban was first implemented in 2009, days after Red Bluff Patient Collective opened on Antelope Boulevard, next to the Sheriff's Department. Its owners closed up after a series of citations involving zoning violations and for violating the county ban. Similar storefront-style collectives have opened up in Red Bluff and Corning but only Tehama Herbal Collective in Corning remains in operation and its owners are cited regularly. A recent court ruling could prevent Tehama County from using marijuana's illegal federal status as justification for a permanent ban. But the temporary ban cites a number of other concerns, including that the same case, the pending Qualified Patients v. City of Anaheim, has not yet resolved whether cities and counties have the right to implement a permanent ban. The ban argues large medical marijuana growths and dispensaries are the targets of violent robberies. Facilities which dispense marijuana have the potential to cause serious harmful effects...to citizens living, visiting, shopping, conducting business or otherwise present in the area, according to the ordinance. The ordinance cites a violent burglary in Los Molinos targeting marijuana and a report attributed to the California Police Chief's Association. Proponents have repeatedly argued these incidents are exaggerated and are similar to the problems pharmacies and banks face. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart