Los Angeles Times

Ailing city bets on a marijuana gold rush

Adelanto wants to be ‘Silicon Valley of medical pot’

- By Paloma Esquivel

ADELANTO, Calif. — In a plot of desert surrounded by Joshua trees and aging factories, developer James Previti — in a suit coat and Louis Vuitton shades — watches as constructi­on workers build the roof of a concrete building that from afar looks like a future Costco.

Previti has spent years developing homes around the Inland Empire. But this is something new for him: a 30-acre industrial park in Adelanto divided into 21 units that will be sold to marijuana cultivator­s for $7.5 million each.

“We’ve always tried to be opportunis­tic, and we saw a place where we could fill a need,” Previti said.

As California moves toward issuing permits for large-scale medical marijuana cultivatio­n next year, a number of struggling desert cities, such as Adelanto and Desert Hot Springs, have sought to establish themselves as destinatio­ns for growers.

Just by approving ordinances allowing industrial cultivatio­n before state licenses were issued, the cities set off land rushes — with dusty plots selling for many times their original value.

The question now is whether that speculatio­n will turn into the cannabis boom officials have been hoping for.

In Adelanto, people such as Previti — investors with background­s in real estate developmen­t, law, even the NBA, but little experience growing marijuana — have come to town saying they can make it happen.

They envision a town bustling with marijuana-re-

lated businesses — cultivatio­n warehouses, cannabisoi­l extraction facilities and a host of associated projects to supply California’s massive market.

As Mayor Richard Kerr puts it, the city will be the “Silicon Valley of medical marijuana.”

But there is plenty of uncertaint­y about how this will play out in this long-struggling city, where 40% of residents live in poverty.

Financing for cannabis projects is difficult because marijuana remains illegal at the federal level and the Trump administra­tion has given mixed signals about how it will approach enforcemen­t. The city also faces competitio­n from communitie­s throughout California that have legalized cultivatio­n.

Ultimately, the real test of whether Adelanto can bank on long-term income from marijuana is whether the new ventures setting up here can operate within the law as stable, profitable businesses.

In April, California released a 58-page list of proposed regulation­s governing such things as plant labeling and managing waste. They are to be finalized before the state begins issuing licenses to growers Jan. 1.

Hezekiah Allen, executive director of the California Growers Assn., said those rules have shown prospectiv­e investors that cashing in on marijuana won’t be simple.

“As we see the detailed regulation­s and folks understand this is not going to be an easy, free-for-all transition, I think that’s starting to temper the expectatio­ns of easy returns,” Allen said. “The gold rush, gold fever led a lot of folks to make some business decisions that aren’t as in touch with California’s marketplac­e, but I think that is mellowing down a bit.”

Adelanto’s leaders have been desperate to cure the city’s economic woes for years. In 2013, the city of 32,000 residents declared a fiscal emergency and has since continued working to stave off insolvency. There was talk of disincorpo­ration and bankruptcy.

In recent years, the town has welcomed prisons to bring in needed revenue. There’s now an immigratio­n detention center, a county jail and a privately run prison housing state inmates.

But officials say marijuana has the most potential to improve the city’s finances, and the benefits are already starting to show.

“We were $2.6 million in the red,” Mayor Kerr said. “Now we’re about maybe a half a million to three-quarters in the red. By June we should be in the black.”

Some of that comes from developmen­t fees paid by prospectiv­e cannabis companies, which help cover the city’s planning and engineerin­g costs, Kerr said. Some of it also comes from unrelated projects — such as a new gas station.

Adelanto has so far approved only large-scale medical marijuana cultivatio­n, which Kerr says remains the city’s focus. California will not issue permits for largescale recreation­al marijuana cultivatio­n until 2023.

Throughout the city’s 360-acre cultivatio­n zone, former factories and warehouses have been sold to marijuana entreprene­urs and are being refurbishe­d.

Since the city allowed cultivatio­n, 56 businesses have secured permits, but only a dozen firms have so far secured a business license, the final step before they can open, city officials said.

A few of those have started growing marijuana, though city officials said they don’t know exactly how many.

Former Mayor Cari Thomas said she worries what will happen to the city when — as she figures will ultimately happen — cannabis cultivatio­n is widely permitted in other parts of the state and country.

“We’re afraid then we’ll have empty business parks because the cannabis people have bought up all the land and all the businesses,” she said.

A number of local businesses have left town because of the cannabis land rush, Thomas said. Some, who owned their buildings, were paid lots of money to sell. Others, who rented, moved out once their properties sold.

Still, Thomas, who was mayor from 2010 to 2014, said she understand­s officials’ need to look for new revenue.

“It’s just not a way I would have chosen,” she said. “It’s kind of uncharted territory.”

Bryon Russell, a former NBA player, and Spencer Vodnoy, a lawyer who spent years representi­ng clients accused of drug crimes, are among those who say they are ready to make cannabis cultivatio­n work in the city.

While they renovate a 20,000-square-foot former furniture factory for cultivatio­n, they are growing marijuana in four trailers parked next door.

Their company, Critical Mind Inc., announced recently it will produce cannabis and cannabis oil for Chong’s Choice, comedian Tommy Chong’s marijuana brand.

Vodnoy said that entreprene­urs with legal background­s like his are crucial to the success of legal, largescale marijuana cultivatio­n.

“We need to do it the right way as we implement it because we want to keep our license,” Vodnoy said.

Corey, the company’s director of cultivatio­n, said lots of growers are troubled by legalizati­on and the rush of entreprene­urs looking to cash in.

“More often than not, the people that I have been affiliated with for the last 20 years like working in the gray area .... These guys are old, salty, locked in their ways,” said Corey, who asked that his last name not be published because marijuana remains illegal at the federal level.

He says he works closely with Vodnoy and others who make sure he complies with local and state rules. For example, each plant has been tagged with a bar code as the company prepares for state requiremen­ts to “track and trace” it from seed to sale.

“You can scan it like Target does,” he said.

Although Adelanto was among the first cities in Southern California to approve industrial cultivatio­n, it increasing­ly faces competitio­n from throughout the state. Communitie­s in the Salinas Valley say they have the agricultur­al know-how and ideal climate for marijuana. Those in Northern California have a long history and culture of largescale cultivatio­n.

Adelanto, meanwhile, has positioned itself as an eager partner for cultivator­s, a place where warehouse after warehouse could grow cannabis less than a two-hour drive from Los Angeles, one of the largest markets in the world.

Kerr, the mayor, said he doesn’t worry much about other cities muscling in on Adelanto’s turf. The city has already gotten a jump on the competitio­n by being among the first in the state to bring growers out into the open.

Besides, he added, California’s market for marijuana is massive.

Adelanto is 53 square miles. “If I put a plant every 12 inches,” Kerr said, “I couldn’t supply enough cannabis.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERT ACOSTA, right, and an assistant cultivate medical marijuana for Critical Mind Inc., a company in Adelanto. Some desert cities are hoping for a boom in the industry, which could improve their finances.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ROBERT ACOSTA, right, and an assistant cultivate medical marijuana for Critical Mind Inc., a company in Adelanto. Some desert cities are hoping for a boom in the industry, which could improve their finances.
 ?? Patrick T. Fallon For The Times ?? JAMES PREVITI, who’s spent years developing Inland Empire homes, is working on an Adelanto industrial park that could house pot cultivator­s.
Patrick T. Fallon For The Times JAMES PREVITI, who’s spent years developing Inland Empire homes, is working on an Adelanto industrial park that could house pot cultivator­s.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? SPENCER VODNOY is a co-founder of Critical Mind Inc., a marijuana cultivatio­n business in Adelanto. He and business partner Bryon Russell, the former NBA Lakers player, want to do large-scale pot production.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times SPENCER VODNOY is a co-founder of Critical Mind Inc., a marijuana cultivatio­n business in Adelanto. He and business partner Bryon Russell, the former NBA Lakers player, want to do large-scale pot production.
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