Pubdate: Mon, 18 Apr 2016 Source: Chico Enterprise-Record (CA) Copyright: 2016 Chico Enterprise-Record Contact: http://www.chicoer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/861 Note: Letters from newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Author: Chris Sommers MEASURES G AND H HELP WITH MARIJUANA LIMITS Butte County voters can reaffirm their support of reasonable medical marijuana cultivation limits this June by voting yes on Measures G and H. Together, these measures strengthen the enforcement of Measure A, which was passed overwhelmingly in 2014. If you supported Measure A, then you will like Measures G and H. Measure G specifically excludes marijuana as a protected crop under the Butte County "right-to-farm" ordinance. This cherished ordinance protects farmers against nuisance claims for conducting agricultural "business as usual." Imagine extending the same protections for the marijuana industry - "business as usual" being all-hours traffic, honey-oil labs, vicious guard dogs, armed sentries, grow lights, tent encampments, dilapidated travel trailers with no septic hookup, incessant generators, tax-free illegal income, etc. The opposition complains that Measure G will stigmatize growers - but their behavior accomplishes that already. Vote yes on G to deny them this undeserved protection. Measure H adds teeth to Measure A. It speeds up the enforcement process and closes loopholes that growers use to avoid paying fines. In 2015, out of $2.9 million in citations, only $171,000 - a mere 6 percent - were collected. While some growers came into compliance voluntarily and/or paid their fines like responsible citizens, many violators resisted, delayed their hearings and unfairly avoided paying fines, because when their hearings finally did occur, their gardens had been "abated," i.e. harvested and sold. The opposition claims that "Measure A is unenforceable." So let's fix it - vote yes on H. See www.bcfact.org. - - Chris Sommers, Bangor - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom