Houston Chronicle Sunday

A rush of marijuana growers divides rural California before legal sales begin

- By Paul Elias

COPPEROPOL­IS, Calif. — The four young men had just started their marijuana harvest in rural Northern California when a dozen sheriff ’s deputies swooped in with guns drawn, arrested them and spent the day chopping down 150 bushy plants with machetes.

“I could do this every day if I had the personnel,” Calaveras County Sheriff Rick DiBasilio said during the operation near the Sierra Nevada foothills town of Copperopol­is, about two hours east of San Francisco.

Authoritie­s this year have cut down close to 30,000 plants grown without permits in a county that is reconsider­ing its embrace of marijuana cultivatio­n ahead of statewide legalizati­on.

“There are just so many of them,” the sheriff said of the illegal farms. “It’s never-ending.”

Marijuana has deeply divided financiall­y strapped Calaveras County, among many where growers are increasing­ly open about their operations and are starting to encroach on neighborho­ods.

DiBasilio estimates the county — population 44,000 and about the size of Rhode Island — has more than 1,000 illegal farms in addition to the hundreds with permits or in the process of obtaining them. The influx has caused a backlash among residents and led to the ouster of some leaders who approved marijuana cultivatio­n.

Helping the economy

Pot farmers operating legally, meanwhile, say they are helping the local economy and have threatened to sue over attempts to stop them.

California is set to issue licenses in January to grow, transport and sell weed for recreation­al purposes, nearly 20 years after the state first authorized the drug’s consumptio­n with a doctor’s recommenda­tion.

Farmers can legally grow marijuana for recreation­al consumptio­n next year but are required to get a local permit before applying for a state license, which has sparked a boom in pot-friendly counties.

Calaveras County legalized medical marijuana cultivatio­n last year, seeking to tax the hundreds of farms that popped up in the region after a 2015 wildfire destroyed more than 500 homes.

County officials expected to receive 250 applicatio­ns by the 2016 deadline. They got 770. About 200 applicatio­ns have been approved, a similar number rejected, and the others are still being processed.

The sheriff gets some of the nearly $10 million in fees and taxes paid by legal farmers to crack down on illegal grows, many of which the department has mapped from the air.

The new pot farms have brought a bustling industry that includes the sounds of generators, bright lights illuminati­ng gardens at night, water trucks kicking up dust on their way to grows, the distinct odor of marijuana, and tents, trailers and other temporary housing for migrant workers.

Local hardware stores’ gardening sections are now stocked with pot farming supplies.

Law enforcemen­t officials say they have raided farms where they have found pesticides that are banned in the U.S.

“It has changed our way of life,” said Bill McManus, head of an organizati­on seeking to ban marijuana in Calaveras County. “The environmen­tal impacts are atrocious.”

To the north, even the fabled pot-growing mecca known as the Emerald Triangle has been thrown into political turmoil as more farmers set up shop ahead of legalizati­on.

The California Growers Associatio­n estimates about 3,500 farmers in Humboldt, Mendocino and Trinity counties have applied for local permits, and will be in a position to receive state licenses. An additional 29,000 farmers there haven’t bothered with the paperwork, according to the group.

Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman complained that local laws allowing cultivatio­n are too “gentle” and attract violent crime, including a farmworker’s recent homicide.

In Siskiyou County, leaders declared a state of emergency and called on Gov. Jerry Brown to help with an influx of marijuana farmers, who have snatched up inexpensiv­e land even though pot cultivatio­n is illegal there. Two growers were arrested and charged with offering Sheriff Jon Lopey $1 million to leave their farms alone.

“That’s all you need to know about the type of money involved,” Lopey said. “This isn’t confined to the state. There’s a big market outside of California they are supplying.”

In Calaveras County, voters in January replaced four of the five supervisor­s who voted to legalize marijuana. The new majority has vowed to repeal legalizati­on and institute a strict ban. But a formal vote has been delayed several times amid threats of lawsuits from farmers.

‘Cultural war’

“So much of this is a cultural war,” grower Beth Witke said. “I’m tired of being demoralize­d by the ban supporters.”

Witke and other farmers argue they create good-paying jobs for young adults who otherwise would leave the county for the San Francisco area. She is among a handful of growers who operated quietly in Calaveras County for decades, attracted by its climate and proximity to the Bay Area.

But the 2015 wildfire helped launch the county’s green rush. The fire leveled subdivisio­ns and wooded areas, turning them into attractive farmland. Former homeowners sold their flattened lots to outside growers armed with cash and betting the county would issue permits to grow.

Mark Bolger received the first permit. He said a ban would drive out him and his dozen workers.

“I’m trying to do the right thing,” Bolger said. “But the first guy through the door always gets shot.”

The sheriff said he’s focused on farmers who have never applied for permits or who grow despite rejected applicatio­ns. This year, he has raided about 40 farms and seized close to 30,000 plants.

 ??  ?? Left: Sheriff ’s deputies in September seize marijuana from a growing operation in unincorpor­ated Calaveras County, Calif.
Left: Sheriff ’s deputies in September seize marijuana from a growing operation in unincorpor­ated Calaveras County, Calif.
 ?? Noah Berger photos / Associated Press ?? Below: Marijuana hangs on a line to dry at a growing operation.
Noah Berger photos / Associated Press Below: Marijuana hangs on a line to dry at a growing operation.

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