Pubdate: Tue, 19 Nov 2013 Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel (CA) Copyright: 2013 Santa Cruz Sentinel Contact: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/submitletters Website: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/394 Author: Jason Hoppin SANTA CRUZ COUNTY BOARD FINALIZES POT SHOP RULES, TAKES UP CULTIVATION SANTA CRUZ -- While formalizing new medical marijuana dispensary rules long in development, the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday signaled a quick pivot to another pressing issue: how those shops get their pot. To go into effect shortly after the new year, new dispensary rules impact the approximately dozen shops in the county's unincorporated area. They set limits on hours and location, require background checks for management and eventually ban any new clubs from opening. But a new controversy over growing medical pot has sparked debate on the board and within the county's vibrant marijuana industry. While strict rules are coming on growing pot in dense neighborhoods, the board largely rejected limits the industry viewed as draconian. "You can grow tomatoes in your backyard, but if you're growing so many tomatoes that now you're a commercial operation, your backyard probably isn't the appropriate place," Supervisor John Leopold said. "You need to do it in a different area." UPCOMING VOTE Likely to be voted on Dec. 10, the cultivation rules would limit personal medical marijuana grows to 100 square feet, while allowing up to 3,000 square feet in rural areas, depending on the acreage of the property. The rules also would ban advertising of grow space and may require fences for outdoor grows. But they will not limit the number of plants, something Supervisor Zach Friend sought. Those types of limits are vehemently opposed by growers, since even seedlings, or anything with a root structure, are seen as plants by authorities, including police and judges. Such rules would have collapsed the local pot industry, they argued. "I think they're making good progress and I appreciate that there's been a lot of input from the community, and the Board of Supervisors is being open-minded," said Bryce Berryessa of the Association of Standardized Cannabis, a local trade group. "It'd be nice if they could come up with something they could unanimously agree on, but the fact that they got a 4-1 vote shows they're making progress." IN DISSENT The dissenter was Friend, who proposed a 25-plant limit that was rejected by the board, 2-3, with Supervisor Greg Caput joining Friend. Friend said he doesn't believe the Santa Cruz County's marijuana supply is in jeopardy, and wanted to take a cautious approach. "Quite frankly, what I don't want is for Santa Cruz County to be a net importer of cultivators and dispensaries and a net exporter of marijuana," Friend said, later adding: "These are not early girl tomatoes that people are planting in their backyard." Dr. Arnold Leff, a former county health officer and early advocate of cannabis as medicine, spoke at the meeting and backed Leopold. "If you use your current agricultural regulations, you can manage the issue of residential grows, and I believe that the limits suggested are somewhat conservative, but nevertheless I think we can support Supervisor Leopold's approach to this," Leff said. Jennifer Lawrence of Rio del Mar said a neighborhood pot grow was a nuisance and decreased the quality of life, making her hesitant to allow her daughter to play outside. "The smells, the noise, sheriff patrols," Lawrence said. "We just didn't know who was next door. When you move into a neighborhood, it's really important to know your neighbors. You're a family, it's really important to know who they are. Without the regulations, you don't." The meeting was not without levity. A question from Caput about how to grow marijuana led Leopold to talk about the differences between flowering and nonflowering plants, and why plant counts matter. "This is what I've learned," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt