Pubdate: Sun, 29 Nov 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: Justine Frederiksen UKIAH URGED TO CONSIDER CHANGES TO MARIJUANA LAWS The City of Ukiah is evaluating its current regulations on growing medical marijuana, and will likely have more discussions and perhaps recommended actions for the City Council soon, City Manager Sage Sangiacomo said at the board's most recent meeting earlier this month. "I know that the marijuana ad-hoc committee (which includes Council members Jim Brown and Maureen Mulheren) is working diligently reviewing the regulations and determining possible actions for the Ukiah City Council, and they may be brought forward for further discussion," Sangiacomo said, responding to a city resident who urged the council to review its medical marijuana regulations in light of a regulatory package signed into law in October that requires state oversight of the entire industry. The new regulations take effect the first of the year, but local municipalities face a March 1, 2016, deadline to put in place regulations to preserve local control. Otherwise, the state will take jurisdiction in regulating that area. "I am very concerned that more pot is going to come up to Ukiah," said Pinky Kushner, adding that she doesn't think "the community has protected the children enough" from exposure to the drug, and "as a retired neuroscientist, that concerns me greatly." Kushner said the current city ordinance law "allows 12 plants to be grown indoors," and she advised the city to "think carefully about" what it allows, because "growing indoors means it's much harder to supervise because your neighbors can't see what's going on." Kushner said the city needed to act quickly because of the March 1 deadline, but City Attorney David Rapport said the city would not be affected by the deadline. "If the city doesn't have any regulation in effect, the state law will supercede it, but what it does have in effect will remain," Rapport said, adding that he also was of the opinion that the March 1 deadline will "not preclude the city from amending its regulations after the deadline." Brown then said that both he and Mulheren had recently attended a presentation on the coming changes by Mendocino County District Attorney David Eyster, which Rapport also attended, and he felt they were fairly well-versed on the topic so far, and that they had more meetings planned to discuss the issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom