Pubdate: Tue, 10 Apr 2012 Source: Telluride Daily Planet (CO) Copyright: 2012 Telluride Daily Planet Contact: http://www.telluridenews.com/forms/letters/ Website: http://www.telluridenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3881 Author: Noya Kohavi COUNTY COMMISSIONERS LOOK INTO MEDICAL MARIJUANA BUSINESSES New cannabis land use code to be approved by June 30 In an effort to prevent San Miguel County from becoming a cannabis-growing Mecca and large-scale exporter of medical marijuana, county commissioners are revisiting land use codes in unincorporated areas. In an April 4 meeting, Planning Director Mike Rozycki presented commissioners - and a roomful of medical marijuana business owners - with the department's recommendations for definitions of permitted medical marijuana businesses. There are currently no specific land use regulations for these businesses. These recommendations follow a previous discussion on March 7 and a county staff meeting with business owners the week after. While county commissioners generally support allowing growing and distribution of medical marijuana in their jurisdiction, they expressed concern that large-scale growers would flock to San Miguel County as other communities and counties in the area, including Norwood and Mountain Village, prohibit growing in their jurisdiction. "We don't have enough law enforcement," said County Commissioner Elaine Fischer, who supported the proposition that large-scale growing facilities would have to be tied to a local retail business in order to limit the potential for them to grow in San Miguel and sell their product in the Front Range and other parts of the state. "Local businesses should be associated with the county, not just grow here to distribute somewhere else," Fischer said. "I'm worried about people coming in from outside the county, without the sensibility of the locals." Commissioner Art Goodtimes said he'd like to see medical marijuana licensing operate similarly to liquor licensing. "We should be in the forefront of encouraging people to grow," he said. "It could be economically to our advantage to be in the forefront. It's an economic opportunity and we don't have many of those right now." Rozycki recommended, and Sheriff Bill Masters, who was also present, agreed that the licensing process should include an in-person interview so that the sheriff's department could familiarize itself with operations. Not unlike the liquor code, both the sheriff and county officials said that most of the burden falls on local law enforcement rather than state, and in the case of medical marijuana, said there is a lack of communication and direction from the state. "If we can do it ourselves properly, it would be better for us and the businesses," Masters said. Local medical marijuana businesses currently work under a temporary development license. There are only four of them in the unincorporated areas of the county, and all are located within in low intensity zone of the Illium Industrial Park. The temporary permits expire June 30, when local governments are to adopt local licensing requirements, if they elect to do so. If not, they default to the state's minimum requirements. In any case, the county's requirements can only be more restrictive than the state's requirement that sets standards for visibility and locations of these businesses. As of July 1 the state moratorium on in new medical marijuana establishments will be lifted. During the next commissioners meeting, on May 9, the BOCC will decide whether to approve the planning department's recommendations, amend or reject them. In order to allow the current businesses to keep operating in their current locations, county commissioners would have to approve a substantial Planned Unit Development change in lower Lawson Hill, as well as an adoption of new definitions for the Land Use Code. A public hearing will be held durring the meeting. Local medical marijuana business owners seemed to agree with the county's stance and had little to comment on during the discussion last week. Rozycki made a point of telling them that the county wants their small-scale buisnesses and has no intention to close them. "It's what they need to do, get a local code to solve the problem of state confusion," said Greg Viditz-Ward, owner of Telluride Green Room. "I think this process is going in the right direction." Rozycki stressed the importance of customizing the land use code to San Miguel County. "We should be slow and thoughtful," he said, in light of other counties already implementing land use codes of their own. "It's worth being cautious. Once the genie is out of the bottle, it's hard to put it back in." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt