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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Commissioners Prohibit Pot-Growing Facilities
Title:US WA: Commissioners Prohibit Pot-Growing Facilities
Published On:2011-07-15
Source:Columbian, The (WA)
Fetched On:2011-07-16 06:01:30
COMMISSIONERS PROHIBIT POT-GROWING FACILITIES

Moratorium Will Give County Time to Address New Law

A new state law going into effect next week may allow gardens with up
to 45 marijuana plants for medical use, but the Clark County
commissioners aren't going to allow it.

At least not right away.

The commissioners on Tuesday unanimously passed an emergency land-use
and zoning resolution temporarily prohibiting facilities used to
grow, produce, process or dispense marijuana. The six-month
moratorium will give county officials a chance to discuss and
establish zoning laws and regulations for such facilities, said Axel
Swanson, senior policy analyst for the commissioners.

"It wasn't about the board taking a position about the merits of
medical marijuana," he said. "It was about the board making sure
there was a proper public process before allowing this activity in the county."

Current state law says patients with terminal or debilitating
illnesses cannot be found guilty of a crime under state law for their
possession and limited use of marijuana. The law also protects
designated providers and health care professionals from prosecution.

Federal law, however, does not recognize the difference between
medical and recreational use of marijuana and deems its use,
possession and distribution illegal.

On April 29, Gov. Chris Gregoire approved several sections of Senate
Bill 5073, which provides additional state law protections for the
use of medical marijuana. The approved portions of the law go into
effect July 22.

'Collective garden'

Under the new law, up to 10 qualifying patients may create and
maintain a "collective garden" for producing, processing,
transporting and delivering cannabis for medical use. The garden
cannot have more 15 plants per patient, up to a total of 45 plants,
and cannot contain more than 24 ounces of usable cannabis per
patient, up to a total of 72 ounces.

State law gives cities and counties the authority to establish zoning
regulations for the gardens but not to ban them outright.

So in the next 60 days, the county commissioners will hold a public
hearing and consider zoning laws to regulate the gardens, Swanson said.

A handful of cities in the state have passed similar moratoriums. The
Vancouver City Council will discuss the issue at its meeting Monday.
City officials in Battle Ground are reviewing the law and are
considering whether to take any action.

Mike Cooke, Clark-Skamania Drug Task Force commander, urged the
county commissioners last month to pass zoning restrictions on the
collective gardens and other medical marijuana dispensaries.

"I want to have a layered system in place to curb what's happening so
that at some point if someone decides to open a dispensary -- it's
illegal now but if it becomes legal -- it shouldn't be unregulated,"
Cooke said.

Exploitation fears

Dispensaries are not allowed under state law, however, people have
been able to use loopholes in the current law to open dispensaries in
some cities, Cooke said. The new law closes those loopholes.

But Cooke worries people will exploit the new law just as he believes
they've exploited the current law.

"It's going to be a free-for-all," he said of the gardens.

"People are simply taking advantage of what the voters passed," Cooke
said. "The gardens are going to be the exact same thing."

Cooke said he wants the commissioners to approve zoning regulations
to keep the gardens out of business districts and neighborhoods and
away from schools, parks and churches. Limiting the gardens to
industrial zones is one possibility, he said.

"If we can't preclude them, I want us to limit them to appropriate
areas," Cooke said.
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