Los Angeles Times

L.A. County extends pot growing ban

Supervisor­s add one month to temporary prohibitio­n, hold off voting on longer plan.

- By Abby Sewell abby.sewell@latimes.com Twitter: @sewella

Los Angeles County supervisor­s voted Tuesday to extend a temporary ban on growing medical marijuana in unincorpor­ated areas by one month, but shelved a proposed 10-month ban.

In asking to postpone a vote on the longer ban, Supervisor Sheila Kuehl noted that there is a strong possibilit­y that California­ns will vote in November to legalize recreation­al marijuana use.

“If they do pass, we must regulate and not ban,” she said.

The supervisor­s voted in February to draft a temporary ban on medical marijuana cultivatio­n and study a permanent ban, citing concerns about environmen­tal effects and safety issues. They passed a 45-day ban last month, which was set to expire this week if the board had not acted.

County planning officials asked for a 10-month extension so they could conduct a “comprehens­ive zoning study” and propose a system for regulating growing operations.

Marijuana dispensari­es are already banned in unincorpor­ated areas.

Medical marijuana patients and advocates pushed back against the ban.

“We have people who have seizures, we have people who have glaucoma, we have those with degenerati­ve bone diseases, chronic pain, and unfortunat­ely they are denied their medication­s now because of the closure of our cannabis clinics, our dispensari­es,” said Greg Hernandez of Lake Los Angeles. “The only thing that this ban has gone ahead and done is reignited the black market right here in the Antelope Valley.”

Josh Drayton, a former aide to state Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) who now serves as deputy director of the California Cannabis Industry Assn., said polling has shown widespread support for the statewide marijuana legalizati­on measure. Drayton asked the board to bring in industry representa­tives to help develop a regulatory structure.

“Cannabis is not going away,” Drayton said. “I would encourage the board to get ahead of this instead of behind.”

The supervisor­s have also battled with the wine industry over restrictio­ns on vineyards in the Santa Monica Mountains, and Kuehl said county planners need to also look at the environmen­tal effects of marijuana cultivatio­n.

“I don’t want to regulate grapes more than I regulate other crops, including marijuana,” she said.

The supervisor­s will revisit the ban June 28.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SUPERVISOR SHEILA Kuehl noted that there is a strong possibilit­y that California­ns will vote in November to legalize recreation­al marijuana use.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times SUPERVISOR SHEILA Kuehl noted that there is a strong possibilit­y that California­ns will vote in November to legalize recreation­al marijuana use.

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