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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Rethinking Pot Laws
Title:US CA: Rethinking Pot Laws
Published On:2008-04-27
Source:Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA)
Fetched On:2008-04-27 22:58:12
RETHINKING POT LAWS

Measure Amounts to Backlash Against Nation's Most Liberal Regulations

UKIAH -- Laura Hamburg, medical marijuana advocate and daughter of a
former congressman, grimaces when she recalls the day she was arrested
for growing pot in Mendocino County, long considered one of the most
tolerant places for marijuana in the nation.

"Feelings of shame, embarrassment and humiliation overwhelmed me,"
said Hamburg. Anger soon set in.

Hamburg felt she had followed the letter of the law in a county that
eight years ago, with 58 percent in favor, adopted some of the
country's most relaxed rules for growing pot for personal use.

But sheriff's deputies who raided Hamburg's marijuana garden last fall
claimed they found an excessive number of plants and about 50 pounds
of processed pot. Although all criminal charges against Hamburg were
later dropped, her case fueled community concerns that local pot
production is out of control.

Ukiah businessman Ross Liberty, leading the campaign to repeal current
county guidelines in the June 3 primary, said in 2000 he was among
voters who supported the current laissez faire pot policies.

"At the time I thought, 'what's the big deal?'"

But since then, he said, surging marijuana production, an influx of
outsiders and a perception that violent, pot-related crimes are
increasing have changed his mind. "I think many of us realize now it
was a big mistake," Liberty said.

For four decades, marijuana has been widely cultivated, used and sold
in Mendocino, providing a source of unprecedented wealth in an
otherwise poor, rural region.

Even by conservative estimates of a $500 million annual cash crop,
marijuana's value dwarfs by at least a 3-1 margin the combined income
of wood products, premium wine grapes and all other legitimate
agricultural production.

Mendocino's "mom-and-pop" marijuana scene began to change after
Proposition 215 -- the landmark medical marijuana initiative -- passed
statewide in 1996. Subsequent state legislation protected individuals
from prosecution if they had a physician's recommendation for
marijuana for medical use, and if the amounts in their possessions
were within local guidelines.

In 2000, Mendocino voters took it a step further by becoming the first
in the nation to locally legalize marijuana for personal use. Rules
under "Measure G" allow 25 plants per person rather than the state
standard of six plants. The rules remain in place even though
marijuana use and production remains illegal under federal law.

Today, the Mendocino measure is viewed by many local law enforcement
officials, educators, community leaders and leading physicians as a
failed experiment. They believe it wrongly put out the welcome mat to
pot growers under the guise of medical marijuana.

Many residents, however, view medical marijuana as essential to their
way of life and argue that repeal of Measure G would only make it
easier to subject local patients to arrest and felony prosecution
while doing nothing to address the problem of large-scale commercial
operations. Repeal only assures a reduction in allowable pot plants,
and offers law enforcement no additional ammunition against
large-scale commercial marijuana operations.

Hamburg's arrest is one of a string of high-profile cases that have
helped stir a public backlash. The latest occurred six days ago when a
veteran Ukiah High School teacher and a friend were accused of
commercially cultivating marijuana in a converted rental storage unit.

Dr. Robert Werra, a respected retired Ukiah Valley physician, believes
current county guidelines should be repealed because they've become a
"front for rampant commercial growing."

Willits City Councilwoman Karen Oslund said widespread marijuana
cultivation has altered the character of her small town of 5,000.

"I see residences in our town taking on the look of fortresses, with
tall fences and intimidating dogs, and realize this is not the town I
decided to raise my children in 15 years ago," said Oslund in a
statement of support for the repeal effort, Measure B.

Measure B is being debated at forums around the county, including at a
recent luncheon in Hopland that attracted county business leaders, top
law enforcement officials, political candidates and longtime residents.

Hamburg faced a crowd that was decidely pro-Measure B, but she
tenaciously made her argument that the June initiative is a knee-jerk
reaction to otherwise legitimate concerns.

To some groans, Hamburg said Measure B, if passed, will be a step
backward.

"There's nothing in Measure B that will help law enforcement rid the
county of big-time, outside commercial growers, criminals who are the
real sources of the problems we face," said Hamburg.

Hamburg, a sister, and a neighbor had medical marijuana identification
cards to grow a garden at her home, located on the property of former
Rep. Dan Hamburg, D-Ukiah, and wife, Carrie, a cancer patient.
Deputies said more than 75 plants were found, but Hamburg's attorney
said only 39 existed.

Hamburg decided to head up the opposition campaign after she was
cleared of her criminal marijuana charges.

"I thought it was the responsible thing to do. I don't want any other
medical marijuana user to experience what I did," said Hamburg.

The opposition's argument on the ballot was framed by Hamburg's
mother, county Supervisor David Colfax, folk musician Ronnie Gilbert,
and civil rights attorney Susan B. Jordan.

The signers acknowledge widespread community anxiety, but they too
argue that Measure B is not the answer.

"Mendocino County sorely needs to regulate large-scale gardens and to
attack illicit grows and commercial trafficking. Measure B is a bogus
diversion that does neither," according to their statement.

At debates, Laura Hamburg recites local crime statistics compiled by
the sheriff's department, figures that show fewer than 1 percent of
the 43,500 calls made in 2007 to the dispatch center involved
marijuana-related crimes.

But statistics also show that since 2000 the number of marijuana
plants seized by local and state authorities has soared in Mendocino
County, as it has statewide and in the neighboring counties of Sonoma,
Lake and Humboldt.

About 332,000 pot plants were chopped down last year in Mendocino
County, nearly 100,000 more plants than the year before. In Lake
County the total was 489,000 plants, the most anywhere in the state.
Humboldt posted a 271,000 plant total; Sonoma trailed with 138,000.

Law enforcement authorities said the spike in pot seizures primarily
is a reflection of its growth as a commercial industry. State
authorities estimate that the seizure figures represent less than 20
percent of marijuana being grown.

If Measure B is approved, Hamburg said, she fears local growers will
suffer at the expense of big-time operators who are behind the pot
explosion.

"All it does is set the stage for more local small-time medical
marijuana users like me to get arrested."

Sheriff Tom Allman has declined to take a stand on Measure B, choosing
to make methamphetamine-related drug crimes his priority.

New District Attorney Meredith Lintott is supporting Measure B, saying
she believes the repeal measure could bring clarity to marijuana
prosecution efforts.

Despite its marijuana notoriety, Mendocino is not the only county to
allow more pot plants to be grown than state standards.

Sonoma County, where there's an estimated 3,000 medical marijuana
users, allows an individual to grow up to 30 plants. Fifteen other
counties allow more than the state standard.

"We're not all that unique despite the uproar," said
Hamburg.

Hamburg a few years ago led a successful voter drive to ban
genetically modified foods in Mendocino County, another national first.

She believes marijuana should be legalized and turned locally into a
premium, organically grown product that could generate millions of
dollars in new tax revenue.

"Look what the wine industry has done for our county," said
Hamburg.

But the recent felony arrests of high school teacher Jeff Burrell and
friend Steve Laino on marijuana growing charges has left local
residents wondering if the string of high-profile criminal cases will
ever end.

Burrell has said he is innocent, but whatever the outcome of his case,
some people believe it's yet another example of how pervasive
marijuana has become in the county.

Fundamentally, marijuana use is a social issue that affects the entire
community, said Ukiah High School Principal Dennis Willeford.

In a talk to school trustees about marijuana's role in the county,
Willeford said that its widespread use and general acceptance of
marijuana presents "a unique challenge to this area."
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