New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

As state considers relaxing pot laws, town eyes regulation­s

- By Josh LaBella

OLD SAYBROOK — As state lawmakers take a hard look at legalizing recreation­al marijuana, local officials are starting to prepare how to regulate its sale and use in town.

“If it’s going to be legalized, we have to try and protect the kids,” said Mike Rafferty, chairman of the Youth & Family Services Commission.

During this week’s

Board of Selectman meeting, selectmen and Youth and Family Services officials discussed ways the town could regulate and control where and how marijuana is sold in Old Saybrook — if it becomes legal for recreation­al use.

Youth and Family Services Director Heather McNeil said youth prevention specialist­s are concerned about how marijuana use impacts brain and lung developmen­t in people under 25. She said local municipali­ties can restrict where businesses can grow, store, transport and sell marijuana and its products.

“You can also put constraint­s on products and potency, and things that can influence the impact this can have on the community,” she said.

First Selectman Carl Fortuna said he believes the proposed bill, which elected officials admit remains “a work in progress ,” will likely become law.

McNeil’s presentati­on to the board focused primarily on the ways the town could curtail marijuana commercial­ization in Old Saybrook. She also spoke to regulating retail sales, potency limits of extracts and edibles, and childresis­tant packaging to avoid accidental ingestion.

“We’re really advocating hard to put up some local controls that will delay the process,” she said. “I don’t want to say it’s inevitable. I do think that, in my field, we are beyond the advocating for it not to happen, and putting ourselves in a position of prevention of spread and really drilling down into youth prevention topics.”

McNeil recommende­d buffer zones of 1,000 feet around schools, day care centers, parks, libraries, churches and drug treatment facilities. She also said Youth and Family Services would include municipal buildings in that list. She also said municipali­ties should limit signage and advertisin­g.

“On Main Street, would we want, potentiall­y, a pot leaf flag hanging out there?” she asked. “I mean no disrespect to the store and those store owners. I don’t know who they are, but that is our opinion about what’s happening.”

McNeil said her department hopes the law allows municipali­ties to control the hours of operation for marijuana dispensari­es, the security they require and the minimum age a person has to be to enter them.

“We would like that, prior to getting a state permit, a retailer must receive a local permit,” she said. “So putting some obstacles into the process.”

Rafferty said the town needs to be as restrictiv­e as possible so young people do not have access to it.

Fortuna said he did not know if an outright ban is possible. But he did support controllin­g where a store could open.

“Maybe restricted to industrial areas, which is a little bit more on the outskirts of town,” he said. “I agree with you on Main Street — it’s not my favorite concept of what Main

Street should look like.”

Fortuna said the Zoning Commission should begin considerin­g regulation­s,

“To see if they want to start discussing if they want to put any limitation­s on a variety of things in regard to these businesses.”

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