Pubdate: Tue, 11 Jun 2013 Source: Calaveras Enterprise (CA) Copyright: 2013 Calaveras Enterprise Contact: http://www.calaverasenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/838 Author: Joel Metzger MARIJUANA SHOP OPENS IN ARNOLD San Andreas pot dispensary owner protests With the opening of Little Trees Wellness Collective in Arnold, Calaveras County now has three medical marijuana storefronts in operation. What may be a problem is only one of them is properly permitted with the county. The new medical marijuana dispensary at 2641 Highway 4, Suite 7A, opened its doors Thursday, giving eastern Highway 4 patients easy access to various types of marijuana buds, edibles and concentrated cannabis blends. The store's owner, Jeremy Carlson, has been running a medical marijuana delivery service throughout the county since January. He incorporated his collective in December of last year as a nonprofit. Carlson said he wanted to open a collective in early 2012 but wasn't comfortable doing so until he saw strong momentum toward marijuana-law reform. He decided to begin with a "small delivery service" to gauge the community's needs. "It was clear from the beginning that there was demand for a brick-and-mortar collective in the upper Highway 4 corridor," he said. "I studied the county ordinances regarding storefronts and also read the Board of Supervisors meeting minutes when storefronts were discussed." After analyzing the ordinance and discussions, Carlson concluded county officials knew the ordinance governing medical marijuana was out of date, and he believed they intended to rewrite it. "Considering there is another storefront operating, with no issues, out of compliance with this dated ordinance for three years, it appeared the county respected the need for safe access to cannabis and understood that the ordinance was obsolete." To read the county ordinance, click here Chapter 17.91 - MEDICAL CANNABIS DISPENSARIES. http://library.municode.com/HTML/16236/level4/SUHITA_TIT17ZO_ART1PEPR_CH17.91MECADI.html The dispensary to which Carlson referred is called Forgotten Knowledge. It is in Valley Springs and owned by Guy Meyers. County records indicate Meyers' shop is not permitted by the county, and yet it has not been shut down. One dispensary owner, who owns a shop in San Andreas that is officially permitted with the county is not thrilled with the news of Little Trees opening its doors. Gretchen Seagraves, owner of Blue Mountain Collective in San Andreas, claims Carlson's operation isn't on the up and up. "Little Trees Wellness Collective has been running an illegal delivery service around the tri-county area for the last couple of months, and now they are opening an illegal collective," she said. "They have no business license, no county permit and no Board of Equalization resale permit." Seagraves said the delivery service alone has sliced her business in half -- a percentage that could get even worse now that the storefront is open. "Their illegal delivery service has significantly affected my business, which I have worked very hard to try to establish with a significant financial investment," she said. "I can honestly say that I believe my business has dropped off nearly 50 percent. An honest business cannot compete with the black market, due to wages and overhead." The burr under Seagraves' saddle is that she put a lot of effort into jumping through all the hoops the county required to be what she calls "legitimate." Seeing Carlson set up shop without jumping through any hoops seems downright unfair. "At a minimum, I hope the county can send their agent a cease and desist letter," she said of Little Trees Collective. That letter is exactly what Calaveras County Planner 4 Andrew Mogensen said may be on its way to the new collective. "We do not have a permit in for Little Trees Wellness, they have not applied for an administrative use permit, they have not contacted the county and they are not permitted at this time," Mogensen said. He said dispensaries can only open in areas zoned CP, which is intended for professional offices. "Even if you have the right zoning, you still have to get approval from planning," he said. If Calaveras County Code Compliance finds the collective is operating without a permit and in the wrong zoning, it would typically issue a cease and desist letter, Mogensen continued. "That's a big deal," he said. "It means you can't operate. You shut down immediately." Why Forgotton Knowledge, which is operating without a permit, hasn't been sent a cease and desist letter was not made clear by planning officials during conversations Monday. But before a business can be issued an order to shut down, Code Compliance has to find it, and neither planning nor Code Compliance knew where Little Trees was located as of Monday morning. "It's hard to go after somebody when you don't know where they are," Mogensen said. "I'm sure Code Compliance is out looking for them." One thing is clear. Carlson isn't trying to hide. Sgt. Chris Hewitt with the Calaveras County Sheriff's Office said Carlson has already met with law enforcement. "All I know is our narcotics investigators did meet with this person," Hewitt said. "Right now they are not sure where the process is at. As far as business licenses, permits and everything -- that would be through the county. We may at some point get involved if there is a drug violation." Carlson didn't seem overly concerned about being shut down by the county, because he feels the county has become more understanding of medical marijuana patients' needs and he believes the political landscape is changing rapidly. The approach Carlson is using, paired with his interest in helping terminally ill patients attracted the attention of Collective Patient Resources, a community organization that advocates for medical marijuana patients, providers and their families. One of its functions is to provide medical marijuana at no charge to terminally ill patients. Tom Liberty, CPR director, announced the organization would officially endorse Little Trees. It has not endorsed either of the other dispensaries operating in the county. "He's willing to refer the terminally and chronically ill people to us, so we can provide them with free medicine," Liberty said. "We endorsed him because he is as interested in the community service aspect of patient care. The bottom line was he's willing to refer terminally ill and chronically disabled patients to our organization so they can get free medicine, rather than continuing to sell them medicine." When looking at his business future, Carlson is optimistic. "In recent years Calaveras County has taken a much more compassionate position with medical cannabis patients and we're confident they will continue to do so as there is a real need for us in the Arnold area," he said. "We hope to play a part in the economic revitalization of the Highway 4 corridor, create stable jobs, lower crime and help those who would otherwise be forced into the black market for medicine they genuinely need." For more on Little Trees Wellness Collective, call 736-7635, visit littletreeswellness.com or email --- MAP posted-by: Matt