Friday, June 12, 2009

Pot shops ban in Grass Valley extended to 1 year


By Liz Kellar
Staff Writer

June 13, 2009

A moratorium on medical marijuana shops was extended to one year during a
Grass Valley City Council meeting Friday.

The council had enacted a 45-day moratorium April 28 after police Chief John
Foster requested the emergency ordinance, telling council members crime has
escalated around other marijuana dispensaries in California.

At the April meeting, council members said they did not want a full-fledged
ban and asked Foster and city staff to come up with rules and regulations
about medical pot shops in case anyone applied to open one. Since then, an
application for a medical marijuana business license has been turned into
Foster, but it has not been formally filed with the city.

Foster requested an extension on the moratorium Friday, telling the council
members his staff needed more time to create a regulatory ordinance. The
extension would be for 10 months and 15 days; Foster said he didn't think
additional time would be needed beyond that.

Carole Chapman of Americans for Safe Access, a Grass Valley resident, was
one of only two people who addressed the council during the very lightly
attended meeting.

"I'm sorry to hear you're extending the moratorium," she said. "I think this
is something the city needs."

Both Mayor Lisa Swarthout and Vice Mayor Jan Arbuckle pressed Foster for a
quicker end to the moratorium, possibly within four months.

"I'd like to bring this matter to a closure, depending on staff time,"
Foster said. "It's my hope to get this done as quick as possible."

"The quicker we get something on the books, the better," Swarthout said.

Councilman Chauncey Poston asked Foster to look into whether a medical
marijuana dispensary could only be located within a medical office building.

"That would cut down on the fears about crime, if it was not in a downtown
retail area," he said.

Proximity to schools and traffic issues were some of the main concerns
Swarthout had received, she said, adding that issuing use permits might be
the most appropriate way to regulate the dispensaries.

In the end, the council voted unanimously to extend the moratorium, although
Swarthout reiterated that she didn't believe it would be in place for the
entire year.

After the vote, Chapman said she was "fine" with the extension.

"The sooner, the better," she said. "This will help the community; we need
the revenue."

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