Pubdate: Sat, 04 Aug 2012 Source: Paradise Post (CA) Copyright: 2012 Paradise Post Contact: http://www.paradisepost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3112 Author: Trevor Warner RIDGE SUPERVISOR TALKS NEW POT ORDINANCE Proposal Will Not Be Ready by November Election After their marijuana proposal was defeated in the June primary, the Butte County supervisors are back to work on a new ordinance. The supervisors have directed staff to come forward with options based on already existing ordinances in other jurisdictions, said Ridge supervisor Kim Yamaguchi. "Supervisor (Larry Wahl of Chico) recommended Kings County as an example of a proposed ordinance and we said, 'Ok, let's look at it,'" Yamaguchi said, adding that other ordinances within Butte County, such as Paradise, Biggs and Gridley will also be looked at. "All options are still open, nothing has been passed and no ordinance has been proposed," Yamaguchi said. He said there was no vote on any ordinance and that the vote was for staff to bring a report back to the board in one month. Still, when drafting the actual ordinance, Yamaguchi said the supervisors are going to be clearer with the ordinance's language. "The problem of the last ordinance was that people were confused," he said, noting that the language of the ordinance made it a "no means yes, yes means no" proposal. He said supervisors received many calls from citizens after the fact who thought they were voting for the ordinance, when they actually voted against it. "People wanted some regulation on this because they don't like it," he said. "But they were confused on the election ballot." Yamaguchi said an ordinance is necessary to stop home invasion robberies, disturbances to neighbors, risks to children and other crimes associated with growing marijuana. "We want regulation over that to give our law enforcement better tools to handle this unregulated issue," he said. Regardless of the passage of Proposition 215, which legalized growing pot for medical purposes, Yamaguchi said the federal government still says growers are breaking the law. "We cannot offer any comfort level to people who subscribe to medical grows," Yamaguchi said. He said local agencies don't have any authority over the federal government. "It's against the law. The fed say they will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law. I don't know how to get clearer than that." Personally, Yamaguchi said he thinks medical marijuana is a magnet for crime. "I see no value in marijuana as a legitimate medicine," he said. "It is not recognized by the American Medical Association or by the Federal Drug Administration. Until legitimate medical governing agencies recognize medical marijuana, how can we recognize it?" Oroville supervisor Bill Connelly voted with Yamaguchi and Wahl to go forward with the ordinance report. Supervisors Maureen Kirk and Steve Lambert voted against going forward. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom