Imperial Valley Press

Judge nixes lawsuit challengin­g California home pot delivery

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — In what could be a temporary victory for California’s legal cannabis industry, a judge has dismissed a lawsuit that sought to overturn a state rule allowing home deliveries statewide, even into communitie­s that banned commercial marijuana sales.

The court challenge raised a fundamenta­l question in the nation’s largest legal pot market: Where can you buy it? The state earlier ruled a licensed delivery can be made into “any jurisdicti­on” within California.

But a group of local government­s behind the court challenge argued that the state was usurping their authority to regulate marijuana sales within their borders.

While the cities argued that the state rule “removes local regulatory power,” Fresno County Superior Court Judge Rosemary McGuire agreed with the state that the regulation and local ordinances “do not occupy the same field and are not in conflict.”

Without a conflict, “this matter is not ripe for adjudicati­on,” she concluded in a Tuesday order.

McGuire agreed with the state that the regulation applies to state cannabis license holders, not local government­s that filed the lawsuit.

The state regulation “does not command local jurisdicti­ons to do anything or preclude them from doing anything,” she added. “It does not command local jurisdicti­ons ... to permit delivery. Nor does it override their local ordinances prohibitin­g or regulating delivery.”

With the case dismissed, marijuana deliveries will continue under the umbrella of the state rule.

But attorney Steve Churchwell, who represente­d the local government­s, said the ruling did not affect the rights of cities and counties to regulate — or prohibit altogether — cannabis deliveries within their borders.

McGuire noted the state rule “does not impact the rights of any of the (local government­s) to regulate cannabis or cannabis delivery.” She added, “Local jurisdicti­ons can impose regulatory and health and safety standards that are stricter than state laws.”

The judge’s reference to the case’s “ripeness” appeared to suggest that the debate might not be over.

Reaction to the ruling — and its potential effect on the market — was mixed.

Ellen Komp, deputy director of the California arm of the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, known as NORML, called the decision a victory for recreation­al and medicinal users. “It’s an overreach of local control for a city to say that someone living there can’t receive a delivery from a licensed business,” she said in an email.

Cannabis attorney Hilary Bricken said the ruling preserves the status quo. Cities remain free to prohibit delivery, but if a licensed service delivers into a city that bans it, state regulators will not be involved in enforcemen­t. That would fall to local authoritie­s, she said.

The ruling “doesn’t really do anything to advance industry interests or increase access to state-legal cannabis for consumers,” Bricken said in an email.

Josh Drayton of the California Cannabis Industry Associatio­n said the delivery issue would continue evolving, along with the marketplac­e.

“It’s going to be up for interpreta­tion moving forward . I don’t think we’re done having this discussion,” Drayton said. “It’s not settled. We are still in the midst of a cultural shift with cannabis.”

The state Bureau of Cannabis Control declined comment.

When the state adopted the delivery rule in 2019, the League of California Cities and police chiefs complained that unrestrict­ed home deliveries would create an unchecked market of largely hidden pot transactio­ns, while undercutti­ng local control guaranteed in a 2016 law broadly legalizing marijuana sales.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL ?? In this 2019 file photo, marijuana grows at an indoor cannabis farm in Gardena, Calif.
AP PHOTO/RICHARD VOGEL In this 2019 file photo, marijuana grows at an indoor cannabis farm in Gardena, Calif.

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