Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jan 2016
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2016 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Bob Young

CITY COUNCIL OKS RULES TO ALLOW MORE POT SHOPS

Reduced Buffers in Some Places

City, State at Odds Over New Licenses

Legal pot businesses would be allowed in more parts of Seattle under 
rules approved Monday by the City Council.

Mayor Ed Murray proposed relaxing state-imposed buffers between pot 
shops and some sensitive areas, such as parks and arcades. As 
required by state law, the buffers would remain at 1,000 feet between 
pot businesses and schools and playgrounds.

Murray's aim was to accommodate new shops the state will license as 
it tries to fold medical-marijuana dispensaries into its system for 
recreational stores, while trying to keep them from clustering.

The state Liquor and Cannabis Board (LCB) has proposed doubling the 
number of legal retail stores in Seattle from 21 to 42. Murray's plan 
would add about 1,600 acres of available land citywide for pot merchants.

The mayor also pushed regulations that effectively shut down some 60 
dispensaries while creating a path for some of the 50 long-standing, 
rule-abiding dispensaries to locate storefronts in Seattle once 
licensed by the LCB.

The council, for the most part, agreed Monday with the mayor's plan, 
reducing buffers from 1,000 feet to 500 for pot businesses in most of the city.

It further reduced buffers to 250 feet for pot shops in Belltown and 
parts of downtown to make it easier for adult tourists to buy legal 
pot, said Councilmember Lisa Herbold, and to deter illegal street dealing.

At the same time, the council imposed a new rule that does not allow 
more than two pot shops within 1,000 feet of each other citywide. 
That would amount to no more than two pot shops within a neighborhood 
business district, or roughly five blocks, said Councilmember Tim Burgess.

Buffers for pot growers and processors would be reduced to 250 feet 
citywide because those businesses tend to be so nondescript the 
public doesn't know they exist, said Councilmember Mike O'Brien.

But the rules may not work as intended.

The LCB has put 54 Seattle store applicants on a path to licensing, 
but without including some dispensaries the city hoped to help. That 
means some dispensary operators who attempted to follow appropriate 
rules may be shut out, at least in the short term, Murray said in a 
letter to the LCB.

Murray suggested the LCB should give Seattle 20 more stores, or 62 in 
total. On a population basis, that would put Seattle on par with the 
number of stores allotted to Everett and Tacoma, Murray said.

That still would appear to be too few to accommodate Seattle's 22 
licensed stores and 50 long-standing dispensaries.

All of the retail applications moved forward by the LCB will be 
grandfathered, or exempt from the city's new buffers. That means the 
new, more permissive buffer rules would apply only to stores the LCB 
may license in a future wave of expansion.

New stores would instead be forced to comply with the old 1,000-foot 
buffer, Murray said.

And it may burden a few neighborhoods with becoming "green light 
districts," he said.

Murray's staff had asked the LCB to hold off on processing Seattle 
licenses until his proposal went through the City Council.

But the LCB said Monday that Seattle moved too slowly.

"The bottom line," LCB spokesman Brian Smith said, is that the agency 
has been preparing to bring medical operators into the recreational 
system since April.

The LCB may expand the number of stores in Seattle, if needed, he 
added, and noted that qualified medical patients may grow their own 
marijuana or join a four member cooperative to meet their needs.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom