Pubdate: Sun, 18 Oct 2015 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2015 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 NEW POT LAWS STILL FAR OFF, PRACTICALLY Gov. Jerry Brown signed three bills recently aimed at giving the state control over medical marijuana. Nearly 20 years after Proposition 215 legalized medical marijuana and allowed local communities to accept or reject dispensaries and grows, it's about time; the clarity is well overdue. But we still can't look for any real change soon: The Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act doesn't take effect until Jan. 1, 2018. A stretch of confusion and disorientation is likely. This is marijuana and state government, after all. The state has a lot of setting up to do. The Bureau of Marijuana Regulation, for example, must be established within the Department of Consumer Affairs. That bureau needs a director, who will be approved by the governor and confirmed by the state Legislature. We shudder to think of the possibilities of that latter process. The Department of Pesticide Regulation and the Department of Public Health will also have major responsibilities. The University of California will be involved, studying how marijuana affects driving and coming up with recommendations about impaired driver standards. In the absence of cohesive laws, much time and money have been spent on lawsuits and haggling, and communities have made their own rules as they fought their own legal battles. It's been a win for lawyers and a disaster for everyone else. Here in the North State, it will take time for officials to fully understand what the laws mean. One thing the legislation itself makes clear, however, is that local laws such as those in Shasta and Tehama counties take precedence. State regulation doesn't supplant those rules, it adds a layer above them. A ballot-measure wild card could come in November 2016. Various organizations hope to get measures onto the state ballot to make California the fifth state in the nation to legalize cannabis for recreational use, joining Oregon, Washington, Colorado and Alaska. At least the state law is on the books before this measure is determined. So the state action is a start, but it is far from the last word. "We give it a B or a B-minus if you were grading it. There's still work to do," said Bob Williams, a Tehama County supervisor who helped fashion the law as a member of the Rural County Representatives of California and the California State Association of Counties. "It's not everything we wanted." Williams said the thing he likes best about the three-bill package is the local control it allows - that counties such as Shasta and Tehama, and cities within those counties, can keep tighter legal controls on weed. For example, the city of Redding does not allow retail marijuana sales; the city of Shasta Lake does. This page has been no fan of Measure A, Shasta County's somewhat disingenuous rules that essentially outlaw growing medical marijuana at all (technically you can if you build a fancy and expensive structure, but the county recently couldn't say for sure that's been done - even once). But even in the case of Measure A, we're glad to see local control preserved. Lawmakers were wise not to interfere with communities' right to set their own limits. Rick Arons, owner of Grow On Consignment Hydro Store and an opponent of Measure A, is not so sure about California's new rules - but not for the reasons you might think. Significantly, he expects the clear regulations and the flow of money from fees to create an environment where corporate ownership could push in. We're not so sure that would be a bad thing. If California's going to have legal marijuana - and especially if that law grows broader - the industry will have to get more buttoned down. Some of its Wild West stoner ethos would be lost. That works for us. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom