The Signal

A regulatory minefield: marijuana

Cannabis business owners, city officials discuss reaction, regulation­s for pot after Cole Memo decision

- By Andrew Clark Signal Staff Writer

Cannabis business owners are grappling with a regulatory minefield in the wake of seemingly contradict­ory federal and state rules.

Josh Eisenberg, who is one of the managers of On Deck Cooperativ­e, a medicinal marijuana co-op in Santa Clarita, said he was disappoint­ed by the Cole Memo decision by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, but his business would continue to operate.

A medical marijuana coop is a facility for people who have medical marijuana cards, as opposed to recreation­al marijuana, which California voters approved in 2016, with plans for it to take effect Jan. 1.

“We’re going to continue to do medicinal marijuana,” he said. “It seemed like a slap in the face to everything the Trump Administra­tion came in and promised. A lot of people voted for the administra­tion based on a freedom vote knowing the Republican Party is for state’s rights. The Cole Memorandum did a good job of ensuring state’s rights, so when you reverse that...”

There have been discussion­s with potential business investors to see if the federal action affects their decision-making process, a sentiment shared by City Councilman Cameron Smyth.

“It will impact people who are considerin­g investing into the cannabis industry,” Smyth said of the Cole Memo.

Smyth said the cannabis industry is “very nuanced,” citing variations like industrial hemp, medical marijuana and recreation­al marijuana, and said each type should be discussed separately.

“The issue should be bifurcated from one another and dealt with on their own,” he said.

Eisenberg said he has been working with Smyth, and is drafting a medicinal marijuana ordinance for the city he hopes will be passed by the City Council later this year. Smyth said Monday that Eisenberg had sent the draft to him, but he was still working through it.

“They should be able to operate and continue to provide those deliveries in the city,” Smyth said of Eisenberg’s company.

Calls to a half-dozen other marijuana delivery services and cooperativ­es in Santa Clarita, according to Weedmaps.com, were not returned.

The California Department of Tax and Fee Administra­tion, the agency that regulates taxation of marijuana, announced the cultivatio­n tax rates Wednesday for cannabis: $1.29 per ounce of fresh cannabis plant, $2.75 per dry-weight ounce of cannabis leaves and $9.25 per dry-weight ounce of cannabis flowers. The administra­tion, which said the taxation was establishe­d as part of voter-approved Propositio­n 64, also said cannabis plants must be weighed within two hours after harvesting.

Last week, Sen. Scott Wilk, R-Santa Clarita, and Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, signed onto a letter to four U.S. Attorneys expressing concern about a federal decision to rescind Obama-era policies that allowed states that had legalized cannabis to operate free of federal enforcemen­t — as long as public safety is prioritize­d and illicit market transactio­ns are prevented.

In November, the Santa Clarita City Council extended their moratorium to prevent cannabis businesses from setting up shop in the city and said they will pass an ordinance to permanentl­y ban them this year.

The decision came in light of city staff’s recommenda­tion to do so, after staffers conducted nearly a year’s worth of research on how other cities have dealt with marijuana legalizati­on and storefront­s.

Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom blasted the decision made by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, calling it an “ideologica­l temper tantrum.”

The Cole Memo decision came four days after Propositio­n 64, the state measure to legalize marijuana that passed in November 2016 by a 57 percent approval rate, went into effect. The measure passed by a 14-point margin.

The propositio­n establishe­d a method for tracking and taxing marijuana, according to Newsom’s office. California is one of eight states to legalize recreation­al marijuana and one of 29 states to legalize medical marijuana.

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