its absolute BULLSHIT that real estate values are down because of marijuana growers....
the marijuana market is the only thing propping up many of these counties..
Indeed, as do those who simply don't like marijuana or those who use it. However, how do you or they know, factually, what's happening with that 'field' of cannabis? Sure, there is lots of speculation and conjecture, but in the end, unless you're actually 'in' on it, you can't state unequivocally that you know what's happening to it.I view 200 outdoor plants in a field as an abuse of the medical law.
So, according to you, anyone who's growing for a collective is an asshole because they're growing at a large scale for those who, for whatever reasons, cannot or are not growing their own. Do I have that right?I know alot of you won't like reading this but no one needs a hundred pounds of weed a year. 5.7 pounds is a quarter ounce a day and thats a lot of chronic plus all the hash. You make it hard for people like me who are really sick to get respect because non smokers think of you assholes growing fields.
WHAT ABOUT THOSE WHO CANNOT GROW THEIR OWN? Shit outta luck? Black market is where they'll go. Then what?The Feds are pricks but shit would be better if medical patients were required to grow thier own and be limited to indoor and a reasonable plant count. IT IS THESE FIELDS THAT ARE HURTING US
No to both assertions. I will tell you that your words are offensive because I've been on both sides of the equation. Last year I was not able to easily grow for myself, and could only get a crop due to the extensive help of others. I know, or KNEW, because now they're dead, others who could not grow their own because they were straight up too sick, could hardly get out of bed let alone tend plants on a daily basis, and that's just the growing side of it.And now the flamming starts by those that sell thier medicine to non patients and cannabis dispenceries that have 90% healthy people as customers.
It's happening in all the medical states, not just California. And go ag zoned? Not if this is any indicator of what's to come.I think that you both have valid points. The biggest problem that I see with large outdoor grows is where they are sited and how the issues with the neighbors are handled. Obviously there are people who are incapable of growing their own, whether it be from the state of their health or their living situation, and they should have access. However, large outdoor grows in residential areas, or even in areas with small-acreage parcels, do nothing for our image with the straight community. We may like the smell of the plants as they mature, but many people don't. It is an extremely valuable crop and brings all of the attendant problems with security, theft, supplemental lighting, etc, etc.
I don't know the best answer, and haven't run across what I consider to be the most reasonable solution. I don't think that limiting large grows to zoned farmland is necessarily the answer, but the way that we are currently doing things is seriously alienating the straight population, and they vote in far larger numbers than we do. As we are seeing all over California, thumbing our nose at them because we currently have the legal high ground is only resulting in seriously limiting or removing our rights to cultivate.
Tulare County announced Tuesday that it is suing five people in a medical marijuana collective for growing pot in the wrong location.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in Tulare County Superior Court, states they are violating the county's land use ordinance by growing marijuana in a rural area near Cutler in northern Tulare County zoned exclusively for agriculture. Under the county's ordinance, medical marijuana collectives and cooperatives must operate in a commercial or manufacturing zone.
California law allows people with medical marijuana recommendations from a doctor to grow marijuana for their personal needs, but the county's ordinance regulates the practice by saying that collectives must grow plants "within a secure, locked, and fully enclosed structure."
Too many murders, attempted murders and home invasion robberies have taken place in Tulare County in recent months because of disputes involving medical marijuana, putting the public in danger, according to officials.
Eight homicides linked to marijuana growing happened in the county from October 2010 to October 2011, and three attempted murders occurred since September 2011, according to the county.
"The biggest complaint we have from our constituents is they do not feel safe around these marijuana grows," Board of Supervisors Chairman Allen Ishida said. "People don't feel safe when bullets are flying."
The owner of the one-acre property at 38757 Road 140 near Cutler is Mario Baltazar, according to county assessor records. Baltazar is named in the lawsuit; attempts to reach him for comment Tuesday were unsuccessful. Also named are Dion Baltazar, Sotero Ibarra Salgado, Ana Ysabel Raygoza-Mayorga and Horacio Raygoza.
The lawsuit states that the county sent them letters telling them to stop growing marijuana but the letters were ignored.
This is not the first time Tulare County has sued medical marijuana growers. In 2009, the county sued Foothill Growers Association for growing marijuana in a building on agricultural property near Ivanhoe and cited the same ordinance. The collective put up a court fight but lost.