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Looks like some misguided language could result in a trojan
Please watch out for the Humboldt County Cannabis Reform Initiative, it is a wolf in sheepâs clothing. The co-authors of the bill donât realize the harm their wording will cause to the small cannabis farmer in Humboldt County. It will be expensive for all the small farmers. It certainly doesnât protect them nor is it âgood for the small farmerâ as the website would like you to believe. It will also cause extreme financial harm to any ancillary business that profits off the cannabis farmer in Humboldt. This is anyone from engineers, consultants, farm supply stores, and even other small businesses that small farmers shop at. Thousands of hours of public comment have already gone into the County General Plan. These people could have chosen to get involved then, but they didnât. This small group of people have chosen to rewrite the County General Plan without guidance from the small farmers, county officials, or anyone in the cannabis industry. The legal farmers in Humboldt county are already over regulated. They have had to meet with multiple inspectors for site management, water usage, and environmental worries. Many of the concerns listed by HCRI have already been dealt with, and these folks, who are not in the industry, donât appear to be aware of all the requirements that have already been processed. In addition there are many details in this proposal that are alarming to current small cannabis farmers, and these added costs arenât being explained clearly by the petitioners. It will also increase the value of the current larger cannabis farms in Humboldt county, as it hopes to cap the size of new permits at 10,000 sq feet, and only for farms or nurseries.
As a voter initiative, county supervisors will not be able to adjust this proposal in the future to make it more feasible. So while protecting the county from a corporate takeover sounds great, when you delve deeper into the proposal you begin to see it harms a very large group of Humboldt County businesses.
Some of the proposed changes are
Legal farms in Humboldt County are already the most thoroughly regulated and scrutinized industry California has ever devised. As a small farmer, I can state that remaining compliant means keeping my business and family safe. I do not believe that the changes to public policy that the proponents are seeking will result in a better protected environment, nor will it make for a better Humboldt County.
Allison Shore
Please watch out for the Humboldt County Cannabis Reform Initiative, it is a wolf in sheepâs clothing. The co-authors of the bill donât realize the harm their wording will cause to the small cannabis farmer in Humboldt County. It will be expensive for all the small farmers. It certainly doesnât protect them nor is it âgood for the small farmerâ as the website would like you to believe. It will also cause extreme financial harm to any ancillary business that profits off the cannabis farmer in Humboldt. This is anyone from engineers, consultants, farm supply stores, and even other small businesses that small farmers shop at. Thousands of hours of public comment have already gone into the County General Plan. These people could have chosen to get involved then, but they didnât. This small group of people have chosen to rewrite the County General Plan without guidance from the small farmers, county officials, or anyone in the cannabis industry. The legal farmers in Humboldt county are already over regulated. They have had to meet with multiple inspectors for site management, water usage, and environmental worries. Many of the concerns listed by HCRI have already been dealt with, and these folks, who are not in the industry, donât appear to be aware of all the requirements that have already been processed. In addition there are many details in this proposal that are alarming to current small cannabis farmers, and these added costs arenât being explained clearly by the petitioners. It will also increase the value of the current larger cannabis farms in Humboldt county, as it hopes to cap the size of new permits at 10,000 sq feet, and only for farms or nurseries.
As a voter initiative, county supervisors will not be able to adjust this proposal in the future to make it more feasible. So while protecting the county from a corporate takeover sounds great, when you delve deeper into the proposal you begin to see it harms a very large group of Humboldt County businesses.
Some of the proposed changes are
- Changing the County definition of outdoor; farmers who currently pull tarps for light deprivation, but use zero electricity would be lumped in the same category as those who use up to 24 watts per sq ft. That would change a 10,000 sq ft farm from a current county tax bill of about $11,400 to $22,800 a year. This has the potential to encourage people to use the electricity to justify the increased costs.
- Requiring onsite visits from county staff before renewing permits; Current law requires annual compliance inspections,to renew permits each year, which includes aerial and satellite surveillance. Every permitted and licensed farm is subject to in-person inspections from the Department of Cannabis Control, Department of Fish & Wildlife, the State Water Board, and the County. The County does not have staffing capacity to put boots-on-the-ground at every single one of the 700+ farms each year that are spread around a county that is the size of the state of Connecticut. What would be the environmental cost of all the vehicle miles traveled for these inspections? Who is going to pay for the increased capacity, which would include staff time, vehicles, maintenance, fuel? The seemingly minor addition of the new language requiring in-person inspections, puts the onus of the farmerâs permit renewal on whether or not the county can physically get out their farm. The language also implies that those of us who volunteered to become the most highly regulated agricultural operators in the world canât be trusted. When I asked the petitioners about this new language, they suggested that I sue the county if I couldnât get them out on time. Yeah, because more lawsuits is a great idea, and the small farmer can afford all the associated costs plus the down time while fighting this piece of legislation.
- Requires any complaints from neighbors to be dealt with before permit renewals can be granted. Even if the complaint is filed the day before the permit is set to renew. With farms currently struggling this inability to continue the season would close their doors for good.
- Require new permits and category 4 roads to each new farm or any farm choosing âexpansionâ â (A category 4 road is a paved road with a yellow line down the middle)
- Lengthen the current forbearance period for an additional month. Currently cannabis farmers have to store the water they use from April 1- Oct, per Department of Fish and Game recommendations. But by changing the definition of âExpansionâ to include water tanks this change would be near impossible to add additional water tanks to comply with. Itâs a catch 22.
- Limits new and expanded permits to outdoor/mixed light less than 10,000 sq ft of cultivation or nursery. Many farms have multiple permits. They need them to be viable businesses. New permits for Production, Distribution, Manufacturing, Eco-Tourism, Self-transport are all separate licenses that would then by excluded from the bill.
Legal farms in Humboldt County are already the most thoroughly regulated and scrutinized industry California has ever devised. As a small farmer, I can state that remaining compliant means keeping my business and family safe. I do not believe that the changes to public policy that the proponents are seeking will result in a better protected environment, nor will it make for a better Humboldt County.
Allison Shore
Letter to the Editor Says, âWatch Out for the Humboldt County Cannabis Reform Initiativeâ
The co-authors of the bill donât realize the harm their wording will cause to the small cannabis farmer in Humboldt County."
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