Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jan 2012 Source: Lake County Record-Bee (Lakeport, CA) Copyright: 2012 Record-Bee Contact: http://www.record-bee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3384 Author: Jeremy Walsh BOARD TO DISCUSS POT INITIATIVE TUESDAY LAKEPORT -- The Lake County Board of Supervisors (BOS) has a discussion set for Tuesday about the successful signature drive trying to get a citizen-generated pot growth ordinance implemented into law. Proponents of "The Lake County Medical Marijuana Cultivation Act of 2012" gathered enough names as part of their initiative effort to force the BOS to consider the proposed law. Supporters submitted 3,285 signatures to the county in December, and election officials confirmed 2,134 came from registered Lake County voters, according to Registrar of Voters Diane Fridley. She said her office stopped verifying names once the threshold of 2,115 was cleared. Fridley is scheduled to present a certification of her count to the BOS Tuesday at 10 a.m. The supervisors will ultimately have two options regarding the ordinance drafted by a group of citizens: adopt the law without any changes or place the initiative measure on the June ballot. However, the BOS could choose Tuesday to direct county staff members to prepare reports outlining the potential impacts of either decision. That research would have to be done quickly because the supervisors must decide between the two options by mid-February, Fridley said. "We believe that accepting our ordinance would be the best thing," said Don Merrill, a representative of the two groups behind the initiative -- the Lake County Citizens for Responsible Regulations and the Lake County Green Farmers Association. Merrill argued that adopting the proposed law soon would allow the county to have "reasonable regulations" in place before the upcoming marijuana grow season. No matter what decision the supervisors make about the initiative measure, they could also throw the county's hat into the ring during the June election. The BOS could have staff draft a different pot growth law to present to the voters. Merrill said he has "some concern about the Board of Supervisors accepting our ordinance and then drafting one of their own to put on the ballot in June." He called that "the worst scenario." The supervisors would have to approve of placing a county-drafted measure on the June ballot by their March 6 meeting because the deadline to qualify for the primary election is March 9, Fridley said. Any proposed law written by the county would have to differ from the pot growth ordinance the BOS passed in October but then rescinded Jan. 3 following a successful referendum petition. Currently, the Lake County Code has no specific regulations regarding medical marijuana cultivation, though growers still have to adhere to other relevant local laws, such as grading and water-usage requirements. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom