Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

L.A. drafts marijuana industry regulation­s

Effort seeks to shield residentia­l areas

- By Michael R. Blood

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles moved Thursday to bring order to its emerging legal marijuana industry, proposing rules for how and where the fragrant buds will be grown and sold while driving out rogue operators.

There will be no swaying fields of bright green pot plants along the Hollywood Freeway — businesses will only be allowed to grow indoors. Dispensari­es would be kept at least 800 feet from schools and libraries — and each other — and residentia­l neighborho­ods would be off-limits.

Other guidelines establish a system for issuing what is expected to be thousands of licenses for all aspects of the cannabis marketplac­e, from distributi­on to storefront sales.

“No one neighborho­od should bear the brunt of the cannabis business,” City Council member Nury Martinez said.

The proposed rules “will help us make sure that there is no concentrat­ion of pot shops in just a handful of communitie­s,” she said in a statement.

Medical marijuana was legalized in California more than two decades ago, and for years Los Angeles has been unruly and largely unregulate­d terrain for the marijuana industry. The city attorney has shuttered hundreds of illegal dispensari­es in recent years.

California voters last year agreed to legalize recreation­al marijuana use for adults in 2018. The state and cities are faced with the challengin­g task of trying to govern a vast, emerging industry with a projected value of $7 billion.

Los Angeles, home to 4 million people, will be by far the largest market. Earlier this year, city voters endorsed another attempt to regulate the pot business locally, leading to the proposed regulation­s on Thursday.

The rules, if approved later this year, would “help us create a clear and enforceabl­e set of regulation­s,” said Paul Koretz, a councilman.

There are similar restrictio­ns in other states.

In Washington, the state’s legal marijuana law forbids pot growers, processors or retailers from operating within 1,000 feet of schools, playground­s and parks, among other locations. In some cases that can be reduced by local authoritie­s.

There is a similar rule for a buffer zone around schools and playground­s in Colorado. However, Colorado also permits cities and counties to ban pot businesses, which most do, leading to a concentrat­ion of pot shops in Denver and ski resort towns.

City licensing is critical to businesses because they need to be licensed locally before being granted a state license.

The Southern California Coalition, a marijuana industry trade group, called the release of the draft rules a positive step to make sure businesses “are not left out of the state process.”

Hezekiah Allen, president of the California Growers Associatio­n, said “robust local policies in Los Angeles are critical to the success of regulated cannabis in the entire state of California.”

In the background is uncertaint­y about whether the Trump administra­tion will attempt to intervene in states where marijuana is legal: Pot remains illegal at the federal level.

And a banking dilemma remains unresolved. Because marijuana is illegal in the eyes of the federal government, many dispensari­es and growers are in effect locked out of the banking industry, so much of the business is conducted in cash. A state study is underway.

“Voters called upon us to prepare our city to enter this brave new world of legal marijuana,” Councilman Bob Blumenfiel­d said in a statement. “As the largest city to regulate marijuana, we will be the blueprint for the rest of the nation.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Los Angeles officials are releasing proposed regulation­s for governing the emerging commercial marijuana industry in the city.
The Associated Press Los Angeles officials are releasing proposed regulation­s for governing the emerging commercial marijuana industry in the city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States