News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Growing Their Own In Sebastopol |
Title: | US CA: Growing Their Own In Sebastopol |
Published On: | 2010-11-12 |
Source: | Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA) |
Fetched On: | 2010-11-13 03:01:19 |
GROWING THEIR OWN IN SEBASTOPOL
City Considers Allowing Medical Users to Cultivate Personal Pot Gardens
Sebastopol wants to regulate the way medical marijuana patients grow
their own, requiring modestly-sized pot gardens within secure
buildings or outside with high walls and locked gates.
If we didn't do any of this, we run the risk of excessive cultivation
that could be done, and maybe has been done, in a way that threatens
the public safety," said Vice Mayor Guy Wilson. "It takes place
anyway. ... We are responding to that reality and not pretending it
is not there."
Sebastopol would be the first Sonoma County city with a cultivation
ordinance, which the City Council will consider Tuesday night.
The reason it is happening in Sebastopol is there are a lot of
medical marijuana advocates," said Wilson, a member of the council
committee that drew up the ordinance. "This is a fairly progressive community."
When voters approved Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of
1996, it set up very general provisions under which medicinal
marijuana may be cultivated, prescribed, dispensed and used.
There are no clear standards on how much and under which conditions,"
said Kenyon Webster, Sebastopol planning director. "The city is
concerned about community safety and having appropriate limits on
what is reasonable on the patient's side, but without creating a
major concern in terms of public safety."
Under the proposed Sebastopol ordinance, medical marijuana patients
and care-givers are allowed to grow marijuana on a 100-square-foot
plot, either inside a hothouse, in a home or in an outside area with
a six-foot high solid fence with locked gates.
It also allows dispensaries and medical marijuana patients to set up
cooperative gardens of up to 750 square feet for non-retail purposes.
The proposed ordinance is being praised by medical marijuana advocates.
The city is being pro-active," said Robert Jacob, executive director
of Peace in Medicine Healing Center, a Sebastopol medical marijuana
dispensary. "It creates a process to tell their citizens to do this
well, instead of not telling them anything and then treating them
like criminals."
Peace in Medicine is Sebastopol's only dispensary and has a permit to
open a second.
Wilson said Sebastopol police would react to neighbor complaints, but
would not be out looking over fences for violators.
Police Chief Jeff Weaver said there have been three burglaries, but
no robberies or serious problems related to marijuana. Even so, he
remains concerned about public safety.
Any time you have something of value, which marijuana is, the more
there is of it, the more likely someone will try to take it," Weaver
said. "Any increase in cultivation is a concern to me."
City Considers Allowing Medical Users to Cultivate Personal Pot Gardens
Sebastopol wants to regulate the way medical marijuana patients grow
their own, requiring modestly-sized pot gardens within secure
buildings or outside with high walls and locked gates.
If we didn't do any of this, we run the risk of excessive cultivation
that could be done, and maybe has been done, in a way that threatens
the public safety," said Vice Mayor Guy Wilson. "It takes place
anyway. ... We are responding to that reality and not pretending it
is not there."
Sebastopol would be the first Sonoma County city with a cultivation
ordinance, which the City Council will consider Tuesday night.
The reason it is happening in Sebastopol is there are a lot of
medical marijuana advocates," said Wilson, a member of the council
committee that drew up the ordinance. "This is a fairly progressive community."
When voters approved Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of
1996, it set up very general provisions under which medicinal
marijuana may be cultivated, prescribed, dispensed and used.
There are no clear standards on how much and under which conditions,"
said Kenyon Webster, Sebastopol planning director. "The city is
concerned about community safety and having appropriate limits on
what is reasonable on the patient's side, but without creating a
major concern in terms of public safety."
Under the proposed Sebastopol ordinance, medical marijuana patients
and care-givers are allowed to grow marijuana on a 100-square-foot
plot, either inside a hothouse, in a home or in an outside area with
a six-foot high solid fence with locked gates.
It also allows dispensaries and medical marijuana patients to set up
cooperative gardens of up to 750 square feet for non-retail purposes.
The proposed ordinance is being praised by medical marijuana advocates.
The city is being pro-active," said Robert Jacob, executive director
of Peace in Medicine Healing Center, a Sebastopol medical marijuana
dispensary. "It creates a process to tell their citizens to do this
well, instead of not telling them anything and then treating them
like criminals."
Peace in Medicine is Sebastopol's only dispensary and has a permit to
open a second.
Wilson said Sebastopol police would react to neighbor complaints, but
would not be out looking over fences for violators.
Police Chief Jeff Weaver said there have been three burglaries, but
no robberies or serious problems related to marijuana. Even so, he
remains concerned about public safety.
Any time you have something of value, which marijuana is, the more
there is of it, the more likely someone will try to take it," Weaver
said. "Any increase in cultivation is a concern to me."
Member Comments |
No member comments available...