HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Pot Ordinance Being Universally Violated
Pubdate: Wed, 21 Sep 2011
Source: Chico Enterprise-Record (CA)
Copyright: 2011 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
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

COPS: POT ORDINANCE BEING UNIVERSALLY VIOLATED

CHICO - Police Target team members and city code enforcement officers 
have been checking on dozens of pot grows in recent weeks, and found 
nearly all violate Chico's new medical marijuana ordinance.

Target commander Sgt. Dave Britt said the size of the grows is the 
problem, and not that cultivators have failed to obtain a medical 
marijuana recommendation. In nearly all cases the team has found 
grows to exceed the allowable 50 square-feet.

One reportedly took up more than half of a good-sized backyard.

Britt said the inspections his team has done have been complaint driven.

"People see marijuana growing over a fence, or start to smell it, and 
call us," he said. "Most of the grows have been in very ordinary 
neighborhoods," he said, adding that people who don't like pot 
growing in their area, or just don't like it, are most likely to complain.

Britt said there's not much that can be done about complaints, other 
than make sure the grows are within the city ordinance guidelines, 
which for outdoor gardens means an adequate setback from the property 
line, and screening the grow from the street.

Outdoor grows require a city permit. Indoor grows don't, but also 
must meet the 50-square-foot maximum requirement. Britt said some 
people don't seem to have a good grasp on how big that is. He said 
one grower asked him if that meant 50 feet by 50 feet, which would be 
2,500 square-feet.

He said most people can relate when he tells them to imagine a large 
piece of plywood as representing the approximate overall size.

Britt said because some of the people they call on are likely to be 
drug dealers, he prefers to make visits on grows with a team of at 
least three or four people.

"That ties up a lot of manpower, so we've been scheduling visits for 
one day about every other week," he said.

With harvest season beginning, Britt said his team may step up the 
frequency of enforcement checks over the next two or three weeks.

So far no one out of compliance has been arrested or even cited, 
according to Britt. He said one citation may be issued soon for a 
repeat offender, but explained the enforcement right now is largely 
educational.

"We don't go peeking over fences, but if we get information that 
someone may be in violation, we respond," Britt said.

After doing compliance checks Monday, Britt said he still has a list 
of about six locations the team will look at later this month.

Citations for being out of compliance cost $112 for the first 
violation, and double with each subsequent citation. Britt said 
cultivators can be cited every day until they correct the violation.

If growers are over the size limit, they may be given from a few days 
to a week to get rid of enough plants to meet the code, no questions asked.

He said the city is keeping a list of growers found to be out of 
compliance with the ordinance. "If we check back next year and find 
repeat offenders, they may be cited," he said.

There is no limit on the number of plants allowed in the 
50-square-foot area, and Britt said that's among the questions 
growers most often ask.

Part of the education effort is warning growers that their property 
could become the target of armed thieves. Near Oroville Monday a man 
and woman suspected of possibly trying to get at the pot garden of a 
San Jose man were shot in the head.

"One man we called on said he wasn't going to grow next year," Britt 
said, noting the man has seen too many people sneaking around his property.

Complaints are coming in concerning pot grows in all parts of Chico, 
police said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom