Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jan 2016 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2016 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Melody Gutierrez STATE LEGISLATURE FIXES DEADLINE ERROR IN POT LAW SACRAMENTO - The California Legislature moved quickly this week to pass a bill that corrects a mistake in the state's historic medical marijuana laws passed last year. AB21 deletes a provision that lawmakers inadvertently left in the legislation that said cities and counties had to create their own medical marijuana regulations by March 1 or the state would assume the responsibility. Lawmakers did not mean to set a deadline. The deadline, however, caused local governments to panic at the prospect that they would lose local control of medical marijuana regulation - and many cities simply banned cultivation. On Thursday, the Assembly passed AB21 in a 65-0 vote after the Senate passed it Monday 35-3. It now heads to Gov. Jerry Brown, who is expected to sign it. "My concern with the March 1 deadline was that these bans were happening without input from communities and stakeholders," said Assemblyman Jim Wood, D-Healdsburg, who authored AB21 and parts of last year's medical marijuana laws, which are supposed to provide more structure for the state's loosely regulated, billion-dollar industry. Two decades ago, California became the first state to allow for medicinal use of marijuana. However, it was largely unregulated, even as it became a booming industry. Last year, the Legislature reached a deal with Brown, which was ultimately signed into law, that requires state and local licenses for medical marijuana businesses under the new Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation. The bills classify medical marijuana as an agriculture product, meaning cultivators have to abide by the same regulations as farmers when it comes to their use of water, pesticides and other products. How well California regulates medical marijuana could affect whether voters would support legalizing recreational marijuana use for adults. Proponents of recreational marijuana are collecting signatures for an initiative they hope to put on the November ballot. Lawmakers and marijuana advocates urged local jurisdictions that passed bans in recent weeks to revisit them after Brown signs AB21 into law. The legislation is an urgency bill and would go into effect as soon as Brown signs it. Aaron Herzberg, a partner at CalCann Holdings Inc., which invests in medical marijuana businesses in the state, said the knee-jerk reaction by cities that have banned marijuana cultivation in response to the deadline undermines the new laws. "You can agree Sacramento is going to regulate this, but if every city says, 'No, no, no - we're not going to do this,' it's kind of a meaningless law," Herzberg said. "Now that cities are no longer under the gun, I am hopeful that cities will adopt a more thoughtful approach." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom