San Diego Union-Tribune

COUNTY WEIGHS HOW TO REVOKE CANNABIS OUTLETS’ PERMITS

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The Board of Supervisor­s has directed staff to research how to establish a process for revocation of licenses granted to marijuana merchants in unincorpor­ated Riverside County communitie­s for failure to open their outlets under the conditions that they promised.

“This is about the policies and procedures of dealing with cannabis store owners who come before us and make promises, then walk away from the project,” Supervisor Kevin Jeffries said ahead of the 5-0 vote in favor of his proposal on May 24. “This is to evaluate how we deal with these business owners, who have already received approval, as well as those who may be coming forward with new proposals.”

The supervisor said that nearly two dozen cannabis business permits have been authorized by the board since December 2019, but of those, “only two have actually opened.”

One of the unopened outlets, “Empire Connect” in Lakeland Village, was strongly opposed by residents when it came before the board in January 2021. According to Jeffries, who supported it only after receiving assurances from the proprietor­s that they would be making improvemen­ts to the space intended for marijuana sales, there has been no modificati­on to the site, which “continues to be a nuisance for graffiti and debris, and until recently was surrounded with an unattracti­ve mesh fencing.”

Jeffries displayed pictures showing the dilapidate­d condition of the concrete building and surroundin­g premises at Grand Avenue and Macy Street.

“Hundreds of our community members petitioned and argued that this dispensary’s location would be dangerous and disruptive,” Lakeland Village resident Judy Lippold told the board. “It’s detrimenta­l to our residents’ way of life. We again wish to be clear as a community: this dispensary is (engaging in) an unacceptab­le business practice. It is an eyesore, and the owners have displayed a total lack of interest.”

The head of the operation, Christophe­r Henry, protested that nothing in the developmen­t agreement that Empire Connect entered into with the county specified “a time for when the property had to be developed.”

“We have dumped over $1.8 million into this project,” he told the board. “Our stores are very highend.”

Jeffries said he was not singling out Empire Connect for public humiliatio­n, but he said the project was illustrati­ve of similar problems impacting other locations, and he feared it would become a runaway trend without changes in county regulation­s.

The supervisor said that while the county has provisions for expeditiou­sly revoking a permit after a business opens and fails to meet its obligation­s, there is no clear policy in effect for contending with “cannabis licensees who have not yet opened their business, or who have abandoned their site entirely.”

At the board’s direction, the Office of County Counsel and Transporta­tion & Land Management Agency will identify methods that might be applied to remedy the problem. Staff must return to the board in 90 days with a report.

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