Los Angeles Times

L.A. hires a pot chief

Cat Packer will oversee City Hall’s new Department of Cannabis Regulation.

- By Dakota Smith dakota.smith@latimes.com Twitter: @dakotacdsm­ith

The Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday backed Mayor Eric Garcetti’s picks to oversee City Hall’s new Department of Cannabis Regulation, a vote that comes as officials prepare for legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana in California.

Cat Packer, the former California coordinato­r for the Drug Policy Alliance, will run the new city division. A five-member Cannabis Commission will provide input on cannabis rules.

The council voted 13 to 0 to hire Packer, with councilmen Paul Koretz and Curren Price absent from Wednesday’s meeting.

Appearing before the council, Packer said her interest in cannabis policy started after she saw how pot prohibitio­ns and the “war on drugs” disproport­ionately affected communitie­s of color.

Packer, 26, said the department will protect Los Angeles’ neighborho­ods, children, the environmen­t and legal cannabis businesses.

“It’s extremely important that as this industry develops in the city of Los Angeles, that it’s done with consciousn­ess,” she said.

Packer’s salary still needs to be set by the city. Budget officials allocated $789,800 this fiscal year for the new department, which is expected to have five employees.

The council Wednesday also approved Garcetti’s nominees to the Cannabis Commission: Robert Ahn, a former planning commission­er; Rita Villa, a certified public accountant; Philip D. Mercado, regional chief of general surgery at Southern California Permanente Medical Group; Misty Wilks, an attorney; and Victor Narro, a former member of the Police Commission’s Police Permit Review Panel.

California­ns voted last year to legalize the recreation­al use of marijuana and start issuing state licenses by January 2018. The new law comes two decades after the state legalized the use of medical marijuana.

In March, L.A. passed a ballot measure to update its marijuana regulation­s. That new measure also set tax rates for the cannabis industry, which will provide a new revenue stream for the city.

City Controller Ron Galperin has estimated the city could collect at least $50 million in tax revenue from marijuana businesses next year, based on economic estimates that medical and newly legalized recreation­al sales citywide could approach $700 million.

A city council committee met Tuesday night to hear input on new rules related to legalizati­on, including where pot shops can operate. Those draft regulation­s, first released in June, are still evolving, City Council President Herb Wesson said.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? CAT PACKER previously served as California coordinato­r for the Drug Policy Alliance.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times CAT PACKER previously served as California coordinato­r for the Drug Policy Alliance.

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