Pubdate: Fri, 07 Aug 2015 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2015 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Andrew Theen HEMPSTALK FESTIVAL 'WILL NEVER SURRENDER,' LEADER APPEALS PORTLAND PERMIT DENIAL FOR SECOND TIME Paul Stanford, organizer of the Hempstalk festival, has one message for the Portland City Council: "We will never surrender." Portland parks officials denied Hempstalk, the free marijuana and hemp festival that celebrated its 10th anniversary last year, a permit for its 2015 waterfront event last November. In three weeks, Stanford and his supporters will once again be back for another appeal hearing before the City Council. It's the latest development in a strange saga that dates back to the fall of 2013 when parks and police officials documented "demonstrated inability" to control drug use and behavior at prior festivals. Any appeal of a parks permitting decision making its way to a City Council hearing is unusual, but two hearings in consecutive years is downright peculiar. City officials mailed the denial noticed one day after Oregonians voted to legalize recreational marijuana sales. It was the second denial for Stanford in as many years. As in previous years, the dispute centers on the public consumption of marijuana at the festival. In 2014, Stanford said Hempstalk would be the only place in Portland where marijuana wasn't consumed on that day. "We did everything that we could to curtail marijuana smoking," Stanford said this week. "The city is being dishonest and for some reason they have something against me personally." After much hand-wringing, the parks bureau granted Stanford a permit for a festival at Tom McCall Waterfront Park days before the September event. Months before, Mayor Charlie Hales said if the festival should exist, it belongs at the downtown landmark. City approval came with a slew of requirements that the festival organizers check bags, add security and generally police behavior, and marijuana consumption, at the event. Stanford said he did all those things, and more. "The city parks and police people are blatantly lying and that's going to come out in this hearing," he said, adding that the city cost him $55,000 in added security and event costs last year. Shawn Rogers, parks customer service manager, said Hempstalk continues to not live up to its promises. Rogers told The Oregonian that he swung by the festival last September to check out the scene. He said he heard speakers from the main stage tell attendees to go outside the gates to consume marijuana. They did. "I actually felt like I was at risk of getting high," Rogers said at the time. "It was pretty intense. Rogers said they did all they could to help the beleaguered festival succeed, and it's still not enough. It's a simple matter, he said. "We can't trust that you will stay within the guidelines and laws presented within the permit." Stanford said there's an unfair double standard being applied to his event. He noted the hypocrisy of Portland Police declaring in media reports prior to the Waterfront Blues Festival that officers wouldn't issue citations to festival goers spotted smoking pot. Hempstalk first took its appeal to Multnomah County Circuit Court, but ultimately lost that ruling a month ago. The City Council hearing is Aug. 27 at 2 p.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom