Pubdate: Wed, 01 Jul 2015 Source: Herald, The (Everett, WA) Copyright: 2015 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/190 Author: Chris Winters EVERETT CLOSER TO A PERMANENT POT ORDINANCE EVERETT - For the first time since the legal marijuana shops opened a year ago, the city of Everett is moving toward a permanent ordinance regulating how and where the new businesses will operate. Everett has been operating under six-month temporary ordinances since November 2013. Since then, three retail stores have opened in the city, but no marijuana production or processing businesses have opened. Businesses and residents have been waiting and lobbying the city to adopt a permanent measure. The current ordinance expires July 27. The newest proposal came before the City Council June 24. As recommended by the Planning Commission, the ordinance would loosen a few strictures in place, but tighten others that have drawn some criticism from some others. In an unusual move, however, Mayor Ray Stephanson's administration is asking the City Council to consider an alternative that would continue many of the restrictions on the books now. The main differences between the new proposal and the current rules are: Allowing producer-processor businesses to open that have more than 2,000 square feet of growing area; Allowing retail sales in the C2-ES zone, which surrounds Everett Station; Allowing production or processing facilities in the Maritime Services zone, but only in a building that straddles the line into the M2 manufacturing zone (a narrow description that includes just one building in the city); Reducing the separation requirement between producing-processing facilities and residential zones to 500 feet from 1,000 square feet; and Establishing design standards for retail stores. The city's alternative would maintain most of the current restrictions and add one more: a minimum buffer of 1,000 square feet between each production-processing facility, in order to prevent the clustering of businesses. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom