Los Angeles Times

Struggling pot farmers may get a reprieve

California plans to afford struggling cannabis farms more time to operate with provisiona­l permits.

- By Patrick McGreevy

State could add five years to provisiona­l licenses.

SACRAMENTO — In another sign that California’s legal cannabis market is in deep trouble, state officials plan to extend the period that growers and sellers can operate with provisiona­l licenses by five years, giving them a delay in complying with stricter rules for regular permits.

But the proposal faces opposition from environmen­tal groups. They object that it would allow cannabis farms to remain out of compliance with laws aimed at protecting waterways, land and the public.

The change is included in legislatio­n related to the state budget. Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed it as hundreds of pot farmers faced the expiration of temporary licenses and the prospect that they would have to shut down operations, industry officials said.

Cannabis firms have complained that California’s rules and bureaucrac­y are so complicate­d and taxes are so high that growers and sellers are discourage­d from coming out of the black market. Illicit operations are not complying with environmen­tal rules or paying taxes, licensed growers say.

So far, only 208 growers have obtained regular, annual licenses, while another 1,532 are still operating on provisiona­l permits as they go through the cumbersome paperwork that requires detailed environmen­tal reviews.

Among cannabis retailers, only 39 have received regular licenses while 2,751 are still operating on provisiona­l or temporary permits.

Industry officials, including Hezekiah Allen, welcomed the delay in requiring regular licenses.

“Slowing things down is probably the most important thing that can be done to help smooth the transition to a regulated market,” said Allen, the chairman of Emerald Grown, a cooperativ­e of 130 licensed cultivator­s.

The state had hoped to move cannabis businesses from temporary licenses to annual, or regular, licenses after a year. There is disagreeme­nt between the state and industry over what is behind the delays.

Staffing problems appear to be an issue, according to Josh Drayton, spokesman for the California Cannabis Industry Assn. Cannabis growers wanting a regular license must complete a detailed environmen­tal review that shows how their farm will affect area water supplies, vegetation and wildlife.

As a result, some cannabis firms were having to wait 10 months to a year to get approval of regular licenses, long after temporary permits were set to expire.

“We have started to see that the processing of annual licenses was clearly taking much longer than the licensing authoritie­s had anticipate­d,” Drayton said. “For cultivator­s, we were seeing our members falling into expiration of their temporary licenses in huge numbers.”

The five-year extension was proposed in part because the agencies responsibl­e for administer­ing the licensing program “say they are overwhelme­d with the workload that has poured in,” said Cathy Mudge, spokeswoma­n for Assemblyma­n Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg), a coauthor of the bill.

The division that licenses growers is authorized for 151 positions, but 60 of them are still unfilled, leaving the office 39% below its budgeted staffing level.

Still, the California Department of Food and Agricultur­e denies that staffing has been an issue in processing regular permit applicatio­ns.

“Many of them are submitted in an incomplete state,” said Rebecca Foree, a department spokeswoma­n, adding that more staff time must be spent when applicants fail to file required documents, such as those needed to comply with environmen­tal rules.

“In addition, applicants often take up to 90 days to respond to our requests to resolve deficienci­es in their applicatio­ns,” Foree said.

Drayton said state agencies have often been slow to respond to applicants trying to complete their documentat­ion.

The change providing five more years to use provisiona­l licenses would take effect July 1 if signed into law this month by Newsom, a leading proponent of Propositio­n 64, the 2016 initiative approved by voters that allowed the sale of marijuana for recreation­al use by firms licensed by the state.

The Newsom administra­tion noted that the changes also allow more cannabis firms to get new licenses, removing a requiremen­t that they hold a temporary license during the first year of legalizati­on.

The new system will “strengthen the mandate that operators move diligently towards annual licensure,” said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the state Department of Finance.

“The restructur­ing of provisiona­l licensure allows a provisiona­l license to serve as a ‘stepup’ license for operators newly entering the licensed system, allowing operators to legally do business in the licensed market while concurrent­ly navigating local approval processes, including the environmen­tal review requiremen­ts,” he added.

The proposed change in the law would also provide a twoyear delay in the requiremen­t that local government­s complete detailed environmen­tal studies before adopting local regulation­s, potentiall­y allowing more cities to allow cannabis operations.

Three-quarters of cities have not approved cannabis sales.

However, a coalition of environmen­tal groups including the Sierra Club and Defenders of Wildlife is pressing lawmakers and the governor to reduce the extension to two years, to 2022, according to Kim Delfino, California program director for Defenders of Wildlife.

She said the bill’s proposal to give cannabis firms five years to comply with the California Environmen­tal Quality Act creates “a significan­t risk of harm to the public health and environmen­t, but it also is inconsiste­nt with Propositio­n 64.”

CEQA, she added, is an “essential” part of the cannabis rules.

“Preventing the discharge of toxic chemicals, dewatering and pollution of waterways, and destructio­n of natural landscapes is significan­tly more effective and less costly before projects are implemente­d than having to remediate environmen­tal and public health problems after they occur,” she said.

The new legislatio­n would also address a concern by the state’s permitted businesses that they face unfair competitio­n from thousands of unlicensed growers and sellers. The bill sets a new $30,000 fine for firms caught operating without a license.

 ?? Richard Vogel Associated Press ?? CANNABIS FIRMS have complained that rules and bureaucrac­y are so complicate­d and taxes so high that growers and sellers are discourage­d from exiting the black market. Above, workers harvest pot at Loving Kindness Farms in Gardena.
Richard Vogel Associated Press CANNABIS FIRMS have complained that rules and bureaucrac­y are so complicate­d and taxes so high that growers and sellers are discourage­d from exiting the black market. Above, workers harvest pot at Loving Kindness Farms in Gardena.

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