Call & Times

Milford voters to decide on future of town’s recreation­al pot trade

- By BOB SALSBERG

BOSTON — Many of the Massachuse­tts voters who opened the door to legal marijuana are closing the door to pot shops that want to operate in their communitie­s, raising questions about how strong a foothold the cannabis industry can achieve in the state.

More than 100 municipali­ties already have imposed bans, moratorium­s or zoning restrictio­ns on commercial marijuana businesses, with a closely watched referendum scheduled for Tuesday in Milford, a central Massachuse­tts town of about 28,000 residents.

In November, 52 percent of the town's voters approved Question 4, the state ballot initiative that legalized adult use of recreation­al pot. Milford already is home to two marijuanar­elated businesses that may go elsewhere if the referendum passes. The measure would not only prohibit retail stores from operating, but any licensed business associated with recreation­al pot.

The referendum is the first since the Legislatur­e revised the voter-approved law and created a two-tiered system that requires communitie­s where a majority of voters supported the ballot question to hold a referendum before pot shops can be banned. In places where a majority of voters rejected Question 4, it takes only a vote by the governing body — town meeting or city council, for example.

To entice cities and towns to welcome pot shops, lawmakers also increased the local option tax on marijuana sales from 2 percent to 3 percent, and allowed communitie­s to negotiate host agreements with retailers that could net an additional 3 percent of gross sales.

The group spearheadi­ng the proposed ban in Milford argues it would protect children and public safety and safeguard the "integrity" of the community.

"Anyone who voted yes on Question 4 in November also voted yes to allow each community to hold its own vote to determine whether or not pot shops would be allowed to operate in their own communitie­s," said Geri Eddins, spokeswoma­n for MilfordCAR­ES. "In our mind we are exercising the will of the voters."

Opponents of the referendum say a ban would potentiall­y deprive the town of hundreds of jobs and hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax revenue from legal marijuana operations, including the two already in business. ProVerde Laboratori­es runs a testing lab, and Sage Naturals has a 31,000-square foot cultivatio­n facility that supplies medical marijuana to dispensari­es in Cambridge and Somerville.

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