Pubdate: Tue, 13 Oct 2015 Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA) Copyright: 2015 The Ukiah Daily Journal Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/feedback Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581 Author: Will Houston SUPERVISORS QUESTION NEW DRAFT OF MARIJUANA ORDINANCE Humboldt County has released the first draft of an ordinance seeking to regulate commercial cultivation of medical marijuana, and it's already raising some eyebrows among Humboldt County officials. "It looks quite a bit different from what we saw going into staff," Humboldt County 2nd District Supervisor Estelle Fennell said. "We have gotten feedback already." Rather than focusing solely on large scale cultivation, the ordinance sets permitting regulations on both indoor and outdoor grows as well as other businesses like nurseries. It also seeks to comply with recently passed state regulations on the medical marijuana industry. The new ordinance has several differences compared to the ordinance that was created by the nonprofit group California Cannabis Voice Humboldt over the last year, which eventually was turned over to the board last month to be used as a template for county staff. Humboldt County Fifth District Supervisor Ryan Sundberg - who serves on the board's medical marijuana ad hoc committee with Fennell - said he found the recently released draft "disappointing" as he felt staff did not retain certain parts of the CCVH draft that he said would bring more growers into compliance. "I just started going through it and looking at the sizes and the permits you would need," he said, cutting off. "I kind of hit the brakes." The issue for Sundberg and Estelle comes down to the proposed permitting requirements. The new ordinance requires new and existing grows with a cultivation area greater than 2,000 square-feet to obtain a conditional use permit - the county's most stringent permitting tier that requires a review before the county planning commission before it can be approved. Under the CCVH draft, only grows above 5,000 square-feet would have had to obtain a conditional use permit. Sundberg said the change could risk the planning commission being inundated with conditional use permit applications as well as growers being less willing to seek compliance with county law. "I don't see how it could physically could happen," he said. Fennell said other concerns have been expressed, such as the ordinance's allowance of larger indoor grows, land use allowances, and conflicts with existing county ordinances on medical marijuana. She said she also shares Sundberg's concerns. "If we put such restrictive regulations on cultivation, such as conditional use permits on smaller sizes, are we then making it too difficult for people to comply and, therefore, are we going to make the regulations so onerous that they won't do it?," she said. "Then we're back at a black market." Advertisement County Senior Planner Steve Lazar - who helped draft the current ordinance along with the three other medical marijuana related ordinances that preceded it - said the county's permitting requirements mirror regulations in both state law and the North Coast Regional Quality Control Board's recently approved water discharge requirements for medical marijuana grows. Unlike the CCVH ordinance, which at one point was being considered to be placed on a ballot as a voter initiative, Lazar said the county's ordinance has to show that the proposed rules won't cause significant environmental impacts as is required under California Environmental Quality Act. With the regional water board having already established a regulatory threshold for grows over 2,000 square-feet, Lazar said that grow size was shown to be defensible under CEQA. "We did that to try to make it more aligned with the regulations that could provide consistency across multiple regulatory platforms," he said. "There are lot of different moving parts and there are variables that can be changed." CCVH Outreach Coordinator Andy Powell stated the organization has no comment on the county's draft ordinance at this time. The ordinance seeks to integrate several state regulations into county code. Referenced throughout the ordinance is the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act - a three-bill package signed into law on Friday that will create a statewide regulatory system and accompanying agency to oversee all aspects of the medical marijuana industry. However, the new laws give local jurisdictions a tight deadline of March 1, 2016 to adopt their own regulations on the industry; otherwise, the state's regulations would take effect for that area until local regulations are adopted. With the release of this current draft, the ordinance is scheduled to be heard by the county planning commission on Nov. 5 and before the board for consideration by January, according to Fennell. "It was important to get this out there so we could follow and be compliant with state regulations," she said. However, there are still several aspects of the state legislation that the ordinance does not address. For one, the ordinance does not create a local business licensing structure which industry officials will require by 2018 in order to receive a state license. The previous CCVH ordinance did have a licensing structure proposed to be overseen by the county Agricultural Commissioner's Office. Lazar said that the ordinance is written in a way that will allow these aspects to be inserted later on. The board is set to discuss the draft ordinance at their Oct. 13 meeting. As CCVH finalized its draft of its land use ordinance, it met strong opposition from local environmental organizations for allowing for new cultivation on lands zoned as Timber Production Zones (TPZ) as well as easier permitting requirements for grows up to 10,000 square feet. The county's draft now prohibits new cultivation on TPZ lands, requires compliance for grows on TPZ that existed as of Sept. 1, 2015, and compliance with all existing state laws such as recent regional water regulations. There are several major additions that give the county greater control over water resources, including one section that allows the county to reduce the size of a grow's permitted cultivation area in poor environmental conditions - such as a drought or low-flow watershed conditions - if the grow uses diverted water as an irrigation source. The ordinance also goes a step further from the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board's regulation by requiring all cultivators who divert water for irrigation to cease diversions between March 1 and Oct. 31 and to establish on-site storage or water deliveries to retain enough water for their grow size. The regional water board only requires certain grows to cease water diversions between May 15 to Oct. 31. With the industry already in place, Lazar said that the goal of the regulations are to head off impacts that would otherwise go unchecked without them. "I think there needs to be more dynamic parts to this to achieve the objectives of allowing for cultivation without impacting the environment," Lazar said. Before the ordinance can be adopted, it must undergo a review by the Humboldt County planning commission, which will make a list of recommended changes and actions for the board's consideration. Based on the current draft ordinance, Fennell said that the board will consider sending alternatives to the planning commission for it to consider during its review. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom