The Mercury News

Marijuana is legal, but facing roadblocks

Only 1 in 7 cities allow recreation­al pot stores

- By Brooke Staggs and Ian Wheeler

Eighteen months after California voters enthusiast­ically endorsed legal marijuana, just one in seven cities in the state allow recreation­al cannabis stores, according to a first-of-its-kind study by this news organizati­on and its California partners. And only one in three allow any kind of cannabis business at all.

Propositio­n 64, approved by 57 percent of state voters in November 2016, promised to bring California into a hazy new age, making it legal for people to carry up to an ounce of marijuana and to grow it at home. But it also gave cities and counties a strong say into exactly what would be allowed and when. The result is a crazy quilt of regulation.

Our study is the most comprehens­ive look to date at how the

industry is taking shape. Some towns — among them San Jose and Oakland — are cannabis friendly, allowing a wide range of businesses to cultivate or peddle a product that residents are free to use. Other cities — including many smaller jurisdicti­ons across the Bay Area — are less enthusiast­ic, with some blocking virtually every type of marijuana-related enterprise and, in some cases, passing ordinances that seem aimed at regulating personal use as much as possible, despite the voters’ will.

We began gathering details on local marijuana policies last year. In January, just as recreation­al sales became legal, we launched a database with some of that informatio­n, offering cannabis rules from about half the state. Now, with the state about to celebrate its first 4/20 since sales began, we’ve upgraded that work, with rules from all 540 city and county jurisdicti­ons in California.

The informatio­n is included in our online database, where readers can search policies by location or by business type. You can also sort cities on our 100-point scale of marijuana friendline­ss.

You can view the full searchable database at https://bayareane.ws/cannabisda­tabase.

The data reveals some interestin­g trends, conflicts and anomalies. It also shows that leaders in some communitie­s are far less enthusiast­ic (and in a small number of cases, more enthusiast­ic) about cannabis than the residents who voted for and against Prop

64.

Among the findings:

• Fewer than one in three California cities (144 out of 482) allow any kind of cannabis business to operate in their borders. And just 18 of the state’s 58 counties permit cannabis businesses in unincorpor­ated areas.

• Fewer than one in five California cities even allow medical marijuana dispensari­es, even though medical marijuana has been legal in California since 1996.

• Of the 144 cities that permit marijuana businesses in their borders, just 57 are levying taxes on the industry (which doesn’t mean cannabis in the 87 others is tax-free; there is a state tax of 15 percent). That’s largely because Propositio­n 64 requires government­s to get voter approval for their tax schemes. But cities that have approved taxes are beginning to rake in the dough: San Jose made nearly $2.2 million in cannabis revenue in the first two months of the year, while Oakland made $2.86 million in the first quarter.

• While state law says cities cannot completely ban adults from growing six marijuana plants, officials from two tiny Northern California towns — Gridley in Butte County and Montague in Siskiyou County — do exactly that, saying it is illegal in those jurisdicti­ons to grow cannabis indoors or outdoors. Fresno County’s Selma is taking a different approach to the issue: It allows homegrows, but charges the state’s highest cost for a permit to do so, $1,420 for those six plants.

Many people seem to think it’s a free-for-all when it comes to cannabis in California now that recreation­al marijuana is legal. But as the numbers above show, that’s far from the case. And even our numbers may paint an overly enthusiast­ic picture.

A couple dozen cities — places such as Moreno Valley and Davis — have passed rules to allow marijuana businesses, but have yet to fully develop the regulation­s, or issue permits, to let those businesses start. And only once those regulation­s are in place can a marijuana business apply for the needed state license.

That’s why even though 61 cities and nine counties have ordinances on the books that allow recreation­al marijuana stores, as of April 6, 2018, the state Bureau of Cannabis Control had licensed recreation­al shops in only 34 cities and five unincorpor­ated county areas of California.

A couple dozen cities are leading the pack on our marijuana-friendline­ss scale, meaning they’re the most lenient cities in the state when it comes to cannabis policy.

Riverside County has by far the highest number of permissive cities, with six that score above 96 points on our scale. A few other counties have two 96-point cities each, including Los Angeles and Sonoma. Oakland is the only Bay Area city that surpasses the 96-point threshold, although San Jose is just under, with 93 points.

To get above 96 points,

cities and counties must allow every type of marijuana business licensed by the state. That means permitting medical and recreation­al licenses for cannabis sales, cultivatio­n, manufactur­ing, distributi­on and testing. They would also have to allow their residents to grow marijuana at home, both indoors and outdoors.

More than five dozen cities score a zero on our scale of cannabis friendline­ss — including, in the Bay Area, Fremont, Hercules, Colma and Campbell.

Many areas are far less hospitable: Every city in the tiny counties of Madera and Sutter have passed the toughest rules possible.

Perhaps the biggest surprise is in Humboldt County, which is famous for cannabis production. Despite the region’s reputation as a cannabis hotbed, and despite having a couple cities where cannabis ordinances are lenient, four of the seven cities in Humboldt County earn zero points on our scale. Of course, Humboldt County continues to have a thriving black market, with which legal sales might compete.

To get a zero score on our scale, a city has to ban all marijuana businesses, block residents from growing marijuana for personal use outdoors and require them to get a permit to grow it inside their homes.

In some cities and counties, cannabis industry rules contrast sharply with how residents there voted on Prop. 64.

Imperial County again stands out. Only 45 percent

of unincorpor­ated county residents there voted in favor of legalizing recreation­al marijuana. But the Imperial County Board of Supervisor­s voted in November to welcome every type of cannabis business, giving the area a score of 95.9 on our scale of permissive­ness.

Oakdale and Riverbank, in Stanislaus County, are the only two cities in the state that welcome every type of recreation­al marijuana business even though a majority of residents in both cities voted against Prop. 64.

In other places, local policies are very much in line with voter wishes.

West Hollywood and Berkeley voters, for example, tied with a high of 83 percent of residents approving Prop. 64. Both cities also have liberal cannabis policies, just missing the leader board for most permissive cities in the state because they block commercial cultivatio­n and other behindthe-scenes businesses.

Kingsburg, in Fresno County, also has policies that align with election numbers. Residents of the farming town opposed Prop. 64 more than anywhere else in California, with only 35 percent favoring marijuana legalizati­on. And city council members have taken a similar stance, with policies that earn Kingsburg 0.5 out of 100 points on our scale of marijuana friendline­ss.

 ?? BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Source: Survey collected as of April 2 of 482 cities and 53 counties in California by the Southern California News Group
BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Source: Survey collected as of April 2 of 482 cities and 53 counties in California by the Southern California News Group

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