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ICMA, the lnternational City/County Management Association, advances professional local government manage-
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Published September, 2018
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Contents
Acknowledgements
lntroduction.....
lmpactAreas ....
Economic Development
iv
t
2
2
4
5
6
7
Public Safety
Public Health
Environment
Sum mary Recommendations
CaseStudies........10
Carpinteria, California LT
74
77
20
23
28
31
34
36
Durango, Colorado.
Fort Collins, Colorado . .
Grover Beach, California
Southern Oregon - Jackson County and City of Ashland
Juneau,Alaska......
Kirkland, Washington
Pacifica, California
Santa Rosa, California
About the Authors ...39
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS It
Acknowledgements
ICMA gratefully acknowledges the City of Half Moon Bay, California for its funding and support of this
research project. We also appreciate the generosity of the following individuals in sharing their time, insights,
and connections:
Amber Blake
Dennis Bozanich
Matthew Bronson
Matthew Chidester
David Durflinger
Judy Erwin
David Favour
Eric Feldt
Rebecca Fleury
Ben Florine
Adam Hanks
Chris Harlow
Clare Hartman
Lorenzo Hines
Danny Jordan
Ron LeBlanc
Joe Lopez
Sean McGlynn
Emily Moon
Dirk Nelson
Amy Phillips
Ginny Sawyer
Suzanne Sitter
Dan Steidle
Kurt Triplett
Rorie Watt
Tina Wehrmeister
Scott Winkels
Deputy City Manager, City of Durango, CO
Deputy County Executive Officer, County of Santa Barbara, CA
City Manager, City of Grover Beach, CA
Deputy City Manager, City of Half Moon Bay, CA
City Manager, City of Carpinteria, CA
City Manager, City of Hines, OR
Development Services Deputy Director, City of lssaquah, WA
City Planner, City of Battle Creek, Ml
City Manager, City of Battle Creek, Ml
Deputy City Clerk, City of Durango, CO
lnterim City Manager, CiW of Ashland, OR
Deputy City Clerk, City of Durango, CO
Deputy Planning Director, City of Santa Rosa, CA
Assistant City Manager, City of Pacifica, CA
County Manager, County of Jackson, OR
City Manager, City of Durango, CO
City Manager, City of Modesto, CA
City Manager, City of Santa Rosa, CA
lnterim City Manager, City of lssaquah, WA
City Attorney, City of Durango, CO
City Clerk, City of Durango, CO
Policy and Project Manager, City of Fort Collins, CO
Legal Coordinator, City of Durango, CO
Chief of Police, City of Pacifica, CA
City Manager, City of Kirkland, WA
City Manager, City and Borough of Juneau, AK
Planning Director, City of Pacifica, CA
lntergovernmental Relations Associate, League of Oregon Cities
Finally, the authors thank our ICMA colleagues Kirie Samuels, Anne Phelan, Erika White, and Tad McGalliard for
their editing, design, and other contributions to this report.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABISlv
Local lmpacts of
COMMERCIAL CANNABIS
INTRODUCTION
The last two decades have brought waves of signifi-
cant change to state laws regarding medical and recre-
ational cannabis, which in turn have implications for
local governments.
Since the passing of California's Proposition 275 in
1996, another 30 states plus the District of Columbia,
Guam, and Puerto Rico have followed with their own
measures legalizing medical cannabis. Voters in nine of
those states-Colorado, Washington, Alaska, Oregon,
Massachusetts, Maine, Nevada, California, and Ver-
mont-plus the District of Columbia have also legalized
adult recreational use of cannabis.l
At the federal level, cannabis remains a Schedule I
drug according to the U.S. Controlled Substances Act,
reserved for "substances ... with no currently accepted
medical use and a high potential for abuse," a classifica-
tion also applied to heroin, lysergic acid diethylamide
State Cannabis Laws as of July 2018
(LSD), methylenedioxymethamphetamine (ecstasy),
methaqualone, and peyote.2
Under the Obama administration, the Depart-
ment of Justice issued a series of guidelines regarding
federal prosecution of medical and recreational can-
nabis activities, the best known being Deputy Attorney
General James Cole's 2013 memo. The Cole Memo pro-
vided some assurance to states and localities permit-
ting medical or recreational cannabis activities that the
federal government would not challenge these states'
laws, provided they aligned with federal high-level
priorities such as keeping marijuana away from children
and upholding protections against public health and
safety threats associated with use and distribution.
ln early 2018, the new Attorney General Jeff Ses-
sions issued a memo to all rescinding the Obama
administration's guidance on federal prosecution of
medical and recreational cannabis activities.3 Despite
the Justice Department's about-face, additional states
I Comprehensive Medical Law
I Comprehensive Recreational and Medical Law
Source: Notionol Conference of Stote Legislatures
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS I
a
)
such as Oklahoma and Michigan have since proceeded
with their plans to vote on medical and recreational
cannabis, respectively. The Canadian government over-
whelmingly passed a national measure to legalize and
regulate cannabis, becoming the second nation world-
wide to do so. ln the United States, public polling on
the issue shows a dramatic shift over the past decade
in favor of legalization.a
ln the meantime, increasing numbers of local govern-
ments are faced with decisions about whether and how
they want to regulate medical and/or recreational canna-
bis in their communities. These decisions are extremely
complicated and have implications across many local
government departments and systems. Public debate
is emotionally charged and not all questions can be
answered given the youth of a legal cannabis industry.
ICMA provides this resource to assist local govern-
ments in considering implications of legal commercial
cannabis activities in their communities. Findings and
recommendations are drawn primarily from interviews
with local government administrators and staff and
review of available data and reports (emphasizing neu-
tral sources whenever possible) from early adopters of
legal cannabis legislation.
IMPACTAREAS
Economic Development
Redevelopment and Growth Potentiol
While not guaranteed, it is certainly possible to capital-
ize on peak interest in this industry as an opportunity
for redevelopment and economic growth. Across the
state of California, the declining cut flower industry is
causing some producers to consider a shift toward can-
nabis cultivation.6 Small-scale food growers on the rural
outskirts of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, find themselves
in a similar situation.T Grover Beach, California realized
its underused industrial land would be marketable to
cannabis product manufacturers, and imposed addi-
tional requirements for public improvements on those
sites to such users. The small town of Cotton Plant,
Arkansas-a far cry from progressive costal enclaves-
sees potential for a legal medical cannabis industry to
resurrect a waning local economy.'
I ndu stry Cho racteri sti cs
Cash-based businesses. Regardless of lenient state and
local policy, the illegal status of cannabis at the federal
level renders it effectively an all-cash industry as the
federally insured banking system is extremely limited
on how, if at all, it can service these businesses. lt can
also be challenging for businesses to access auxiliary
financial (e.g., accounting) or legal services that other
types of businesses take for granted. For local govern-
ments, this means being prepared to accept massive
cash payments for taxes and fees, which could include
purchasing cash-counting machines and/or increas-
ing security to protect staff and facilities. And for local
economies, all-cash offers on land can place pressures
on availability and have pricing consequences for other
industries as well.
Who are operators? The high cost of licenses,
permits, land, security, other startup requirements, as
well as a lack of access to financing present significant
barriers impacting who can enter the industry. But
the industry is attracting a wide range of operators,
from those with a history in agriculture to tech-sawy
entrepreneurs. Google employees own one of the few
cannabis retail stores in Kirkland, Washington, while a
large start-up in Grover Beach, California is connected
to a well-known Los Angeles rapper and TV personality.
ln Santa Rosa, California, city staff discovered through
A note on terminology: Cannabis is
the biological genus or generic name
for multiple species of plants also
popularly referred to as marijuana,
hemp, and no shortage of other slang
terms. Although early U.S. legislation
on this topic used the spelling "mari-
huana," some have argued this term
and its variants, specific to use of the
plant for smoking, were introduced
in an attempt to marginalize migrant
populations.s Despite cannabis being
the scientific term, marijuana pre-
vailed in common vernacular. This
report gives preference to the scien-
tific term cannabis but uses marijuana
interchangeably in some case studies
to be consistent with the relevant
state and local legislation.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS2
their licensing processes that many cannabis businesses
were operated by female heads-of-households.
lndustry employment. The Washington State
lnstitute for Public Policy, charged with evaluating
the state's implementation of its legalization measure,
estimated the average of its 700 active cannabis busi-
nesses employed approximately nine full-time equiva-
lent (FTE) employees at an average hourly wage of
$76.45 (median of $13.44) in the final quarter of 2076.
The majority of retailers, processors, and producers
were classified as small, employing less than nine FTE.
Producers and processers tended to be even smaller,
employing four or fewer FTE.e
Revenue Generotion
State leaders in favor of a regulated legal cannabis
industry often tout the associated economic opportuni-
ties from license fees and sales and excise taxes. States
have earmarked this revenue for specific needs such as
schools (including construction, early education, and
anti-bullying measures), public health (substance abuse
prevention/treatment, mental health), and public safety.
Slices of revenue are also passed through to local
governments where cannabis activities are permitted.
Revenue distribution formulas may account for popula-
tion, number of licensed businesses, and other fac-
tors, and are regularly subject to challenge or change;
cultivation hotspot Jackson County, Oregon is urging
its state to weigh total canopy size more heavily in its
revenue-sharing calculations. Some states, such as Ore-
gon, also prescribe how locally shared revenue should
be spent (on public safety, in the Oregon example). For
multiple reasons, the local share tends to be signifi-
cantly smaller and thus less impactful.
ln light of this, and to offset local administration,
regulation, and enforcement costs, many communities
have elected to impose their own license fees and/or
additional local taxes on the cannabis industry. State
legislation may set restrictions on the rate and process
for doing so, and state municipal leagues are often
useful resources in parsing those regulations. Spe-
cific guidelines for setting such rates are beyond the
scope of this report, but general observations from our
research include the following.
- Explore this option as early as possible. Durango,
Colorado waited until the industry had been oper-
ating locally for multiple years before introducing a
dedicated tax proposal, which they were forced to
drop in the face of overwhelming opposition.
- lt can be tempting to overreach with projections.
Early analyses on the potential economic impacts
of the cannabis industry are fraught with assump-
tions that can multiply into gross exaggerations
and unrealized expectations (true for any industry,
but particularly so for one just emerging from
underground).
- Avoid taxing the industry back underground. The
city of Grover Beach, California actually adjusted
its tax rates downward as the industry came online
to maintain a competitive overall effective tax rate.
- Consider your costs, which likely spread far
across your organization. The City of Santa Rosa,
California provides a detailed breakdown of the
estimated steps and costs associated with just
the review of business applications, which are
substantial.l0 Fort Collins, Colorado is carefully
trying to monitor and cover its costs, which also
include staff support from a licensing coordina-
tor and dedicated police officer. ln contrast, the
small city of Hines, Oregon believed it was seizing
an economic opportunity as the only city in its
county to allow commercial cannabis businesses,
but the administrative burden on its limited staff
has left them questioning the net benefit.
Of the communities we interviewed for this report,
those enlisting the help of external consultants with
cannabis industry expertise were typically pleased with
the support provided.
Tourism
Tourism is a signifrcant economic sector in virtually all
of the early states to legalize recreational cannabis, so
it warrants special attention. While individual opinions
vary as to whether cannabis is a deterrent to tourism,
research suggests a more neutral-to-favorable impact.
ln 2076, the Colorado Tourism Office included a new
series of marijuana-related questions in its annual
research on visitor behavior. A contracted research
firm queried individuals as to whether legalization of
marijuana influenced their perceptions on living/work-
ing, visiting, or purchasing good/services from those
states. According to their findings, a majority of visitors'
opinions of states where mar'rjuana was legalized did
not change. Approximately 30 percent of respondents
viewed those states more positively, and approximately
1 in 10 had a more negative view based on legalization
of marijuana. Results were also stratified by whether
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 3
the respondent resided in Colorado and/or had taken
a leisure trip in Colorado over the past year. Among
nonresidents visiting Colorado in the year of this study,
47 percent said that legalization of marijuana positively
influenced their consideration of states to visit. Another
study commissioned by the Colorado Tourism Office
estimates that 15 percent of Colorado tourists engaged
in a marijuana-related activity during their visit, with
a third of those citing that activity as a motivation for
their trip.11 lt is worth noting that state and local tour-
ism offices generally do not promote cannabis-related
activities due to explicit or ambiguous regulations
based on federal legal status and/or limiting advertising
to minors.12
Laws restricting smoking or consumption can present
a complication for local cannabis-related tourism, while
at the same time alleviating some concerns of residents.
State and local laws vary, but restrictions similar to those
targeting the use of tobacco or alcohol use often apply,
as do new regulations prohibiting on-premises cannabis
consumption. Private property owners and operators
can also impose their own restrictions on cannabis con-
sumption. Tourists may be surprised to discover they are
prohibited from consuming cannabis products in public
spaces, in rental cars (even as passengers), in hotels, and
at the point of sale, not to mention that they cannot
bring cannabis products in or out of the state. lt would
be reasonable to anticipate a learning curve while tour-
ists and residents adjust to any changes in local and state
laws. Cities and states have developed public education
campaigns and materials addressing frequent questions
and assumptions.l3
Local government leaders in communities electing to
allow commercial cannabis activities observed entre-
preneurial operators tapping into tourism interests.
Many of the states out front early on legalized recre-
ational cannabis are home to craft-oriented beer and/or
wine production, which some view as complementary
to high-quality, locally produced cannabis. Cities and
regions have also seen a rise in "green tourism" services
such as taxis/limousines and travel/tour agencies.
Public Safety
Property ond Personal Crime
Local governments can anticipate concern that cannabis
businesses may attract criminal activity such as burglary
theft, or more serious offenses. The persistence of a can-
nabis black market-the only market in some states-and
the cash-based nature of the industry do present condi-
tions that could encourage such activiW. These risks
have not been lost on state and local regulators, who
have built a range of precautions into cannabis licens-
ing and land use regulations, such as requirements for
security systems, lighting, and employee background
checks to protect the businesses themselves as well as
local communities.
As the sector generally most accessible to the public,
retail businesses (or medical cannabis provisioning
centers or dispensaries) are often a primary concern
to municipalities. Communities implementing these
protective operating and siting requirements reported
overall satisfaction with their local legal operators and
noted that providing standards for compliance shifts
more of the responsibility from law to code enforce-
ment. The City of Fort Collins dedicated a police officer
to the industry whose work is characterized mainly as
relationship building rather than punitive; police in the
City and Borough of Juneau, Alaska also assist busi-
nesses with implementing best practices. The police
chief in Pacifica, California, notes that previously illegal
businesses avoided reporting burglaries and other
crimes against their property for fear of exposing
themselves. Now, they meet local safety standards and
enjoy added protection from the police department-
which hasn't seen any significant increase in the calls
for service.
Complementing these anecdotal reports from city
administrators, the Washington State lnstitute for
Public Policy provides statistics on several types of
crime in the state since the legalization of recreational
cannabis.la Arrests for drug or narcotic violations
decreased by approximately 15 percent since 2072.
"lncidents" (or investigations, whether resulting in an
arrest or not) identified as mar'rjuana-related decreased
by 63 percentfrom 2072-2015. Drug-only Driving
Under the lnfluence (DUl) arrests, which do not dif-
ferentiate marijuana from other drugs, decreased by
about a third to approximately 1,200 for 2075. Among
drivers involved in a traffic fatalitywho are tested for
drugs or alcohol, there have been no significant growth
or decline in those testing positive for marijuana alone
or in combination with other drugs or alcohol. Dur-
ing that time, incidents identified as amphetamine/
methamphetamine- or heroin-related increased by
72 percent and 4t percent, respectively. A follow up
report released in 2077 found no evidence linking
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS4
Washington counties' retail cannabis sales with drug-
related convictions.ls
Safety Hozords
Cannabis product manufacturing/processing often
involves chemical extractions, through which solvents
are used to remove resin from plants and convert it into
hash oil. The high-concentrate oil can then be infused
into edibles, tinctures, and other products, or consumed
by smoking or vaporizing. Because of the volatile sol-
vents used, the extraction process should only take place
in regulated environments using proper equipment and
safety precautions-otherwise, risk of explosion is high.
This is enough to dissuade some local governments from
wanting to allow such activities in their communities.
lncreased opportunities for legal cultivation of
cannabis, including at the personal scale, may tempt
amateur processors to attempt these extractions in
unregulated settings such as residential neighborhoods.
Beyond the threats to individuals involved and to first
responders, the extraction process poses the additional
risk of a fire spreading to other nearby structures. The
City and County of Denver experienced nine hash oil
explosions between January and September 75,2074,
and the state's primary burn center has seen a spike in
extraction burn patients since 2072.16
An lmportant Distinchbn
To be sure, commercial cannabis-related crimes or
safety hazards make the local news, and local govern-
ment administrators acknowledged examples ranging
from mundane to violent. A common theme, however,
is their tendency to involve unauthorized cannabis
activities, such as illegal grow operations in homes or
on other private land.17 A black market exists, though
its presence varies across communities, so even com-
munities electing to ban cannabis to the fullest extent
possible are vulnerable to these crimes.
Traffic
A more practical matter, predicting circulation impacts
of commercial cannabis activities, is an emergent focus
for transportation engineers. The County of Santa
Barbara, California, provides an example of a detailed
analysis estimating the potential impacts of seven dif-
ferent types of activities along the supply chain.18 Jack-
son County, Oregon observed increased traffic in rural
neighborhoods since cultivation (both authorized and
unauthorized) began to proliferate. The Seattle sub-
urbs of Kirkland and lssaquah also noted slightly more
intense circulation and parking demand than antici-
pated for their early retail businesses. lnterim lssaquah
City Administrator Emily Moon noted, "ln terms of trip
generation, retail mar'rjuana is similar to fast food in
some ways. lt's fairly constant traffic."
Public Health
Most states that have legalized adult use of recre-
ational cannabis are dedicating a portion of their tax
and fee revenues to public health initiatives, often with
a particular youth focus.
Debate on legalization tends to be charged with
conflicting claims about the relationship between can-
nabis and public health indicators. The Colorado Retail
Marijuana Public Health Advisory Committee, a body
of experts appointed by the Colorado Department of
Public Health and Environment to provide unbiased
and transparent evaluation of scientific literature and
data on marijuana use and health outcomes, notes the
complexity of evaluating these associations for strength
(or lack thereof) and causality. lts reports break down
the validity of common claims made about youth and
adult use of cannabis and may be helpful to local gov-
ernments in talking through community concerns.le
Youth lmpocts
Public health experts, including the Colorado com-
mittee, do tend to agree that youth abuse of can-
nabis can be associated with lower graduation rates
and increased susceptibility for addiction and mental
health issues. Likewise, opponents and proponents of
legalization are often united in concerns about poten-
tial increases in use/abuse among young people. But
evidence that legalization of cannabis significantly
changes patterns of youth use/abuse is lacking.
According to the biennial Washington State Healthy
Youth Survey, rates of current marijuana use stayed
relatively consistent for sixth, eighth, tenth, and twelfth
graders f r om 2Ol2 to 2Ot6 (recreationa I legislation
passed in 2072),. Rates do increase across the age
groups, from about 1 percent of sixth graders up to
about a quarter of twelfth graders. Ease of access also
increases by grade, but perception of access remained
relatively consistent over time. Four percent of all
Washington state students were suspended or expelled
during the 2015-2015 school year. Of those, 9 percent
(less than half a percent of all students) were sus-
pended or expelled due to marijuana possession.20
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 5
Colorado's youth surveys yielded similar results.2l
Multiple analyses of the biennial Healthy Kids Colorado
Survey agreed that marijuana use among statewide
youth remained essentially unchanged from 2013 to
2015, though recreational adult use became legal in
2014. These same types of surveys are conducted
across the country, regardless of cannabis' current legal
status. Results of each state's youth surveys are used to
inform and target education and prevention strategies
that can be funded through legal cannabis revenues.
State requirements will also mandate buffering
of sensitive uses, such as schools, child care facili-
ties, parks, and otheryouth-serving centers. Typically,
local governments will have the right to modify some
of these provisions according to local preferences
and conditions, though legal opinions vary about the
flexibility to do so. Washington State allows local
governments to reduce this buffer for everything
except elementary and secondary schools and public
playgrounds; the City of Kirkland exercised this option
to accommodate businesses around 500-plus feet of
licensed child care centers, given the layout of its zon-
ing map. Communities may elect to impose additional
restrictions, as was done in Grover Beach, California,
which extended its buffers along designated school
walking routes.
From 2015 through April 2018, the state of Wash-
ington logged approximately 200 violations for mari-
juana sale/service to a minor. Approximately one-third
of those were issued in unincorporated areas; the rest
were scattered across approximately 50 municipalities
overthe 3-plus year period. Reflecting on the strict
requirements of Colorado's state inventory tracking
system, Durango city staff noted that minors'access to
cannabis was easier to regulate than alcohol.
AdultUse
Perspectives on adult use of cannabis and its health
implications are much more divergent. With a majority
of states now permitting some degree of medical can-
nabis use, clearly there is strong support for its thera-
peutic properties in certain situations. But discussions
about cannabis as a recreational substance-informed
by a blend of evidence and personal values-often con-
flate it with alcohol, tobacco, or opioids. Some argue
that cannabis is less harmful or habit-forming than
these other substances; others believe it to be a gate-
way to more serious substance abuse. The National
lnstitute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) acknowledges that
habitual cannabis use can lead to "marijuana use dis-
order" or addiction in its most severe form, but these
types of problems afflict a minority of reported can-
nabis users.2'? NIDA also notes some evidence suggest-
ing links between marijuana and other drug use for
a minority of cannabis users, but that there are many
complicating factors and further research is needed.23
There is less dispute that the mind-altering chemicals
in cannabis impair judgement, coordination, and reac-
tion time. Depending on the form of consumption, the
effects can be delayed and prolonged for hours; traces of
the chemicals-though unfelt-can remain detectable in
the bloodstream for weeks.2a Even in states where rec-
reational adult use or medical use is legal, it is important
to remember that all laws and regulations concerning
what one cannot do under the influence of cannabis-
e.g., operate a vehicle, show up to work-still apply. The
police department in Kirkland, Washington, was given
explicit instructions not to "de-police" these sorts of
behaviors that fall under its purview. Local law enforce-
ment may benefit from additional training in how to
identify and confirm potential violations, since assessing
the influence of cannabis will typically require a blood
test and may not be possible in the field.2s
Recent studies of states post-legalization have
seen some upticks in public health statistics related to
cannabis use. For example, annual average calls to the
Poison Control Center in Washington increased by 73
percent in the years following legalization.26 Colorado
also saw increases in marijuana exposure calls, as well
as in marijuana-related hospitalizations and emergency
department visits.27 These may be indications of legiti-
mate concerns, such as a need to regulate concentra-
tion and packaging of edible cannabis products (which
was done in Colorado), and they may be influenced
by changes in patient honesty or medical billing prac-
tices. And as with all statistics on the industry, it is too
soon to tell whether trends will continue, level off, or
reverse. Fortunately, researchers will have access to
more time-series data from more states as the legal
landscape expands.
Environment
Odor
It can be a tough call as to which is more pervasive-
cannabis odor or the concerns about it. Odor concerns,
whether tied to the plants themselves or the smoke
from consumption, are legitimate. For some, odor may
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS6
trigger allergies or asthma, for others it may simply
trigger a reaction based on one's personal views about
an historically taboo substance. lt is possible for local
regulations permitting cannabis uses to be a recourse
for those most opposed to its odor, though there are
some complicating factors.
ln addition to siting activities in appropriate loca-
tions relative to other uses, land use regulations per-
mitting activities along the cannabis supply chain will
almost certainly include stipulations about odor control,
aiming to reduce the likelihood of a nuisance issue.
Regulations provide a means for enforcement; a neigh-
bor can complain if aggrieved. Formal litigation of odor
nuisance cases has had mixed outcomes, as it can be
difficult to determine the nuisance threshold or to pin-
point the precise source. However, local governments
recently authorizing commercial cannabis activities
conceded that while odor issues may be more common
at the onset, they tended to dissipate as businesses
became "more professional" and are given a chance to
improve their odor mitigation systems.
From a consumption perspective and as mentioned
in the earlier discussion on tourism impacts, many local
governments already have bans in place regarding
smoking indoors and/or in public places. Land use regu-
lations for commercial cannabis retail can and typically
do prohibit onsite consumption.
Resource lmpacts
Cannabis cultivation (and to some extent processing)
also raises concerns about water, soil, and light/energy
use, the specifics of which will vary depending on the
local capacity (climate, infrastructure, etc.) for commer-
cial cultivation. Some regulations, whether specific to
cannabis or generally applicable to agriculture, will be
set at the state level, and state departments of agricul-
ture and natural resources have developed answers to
frequently asked questions about regulations govern-
ing cannabis as an agricultural activity and water use.28
Local governments may wish to direct prospective local
growers to pertinent recommendations and regulations
and clarify where additional local requirements (related
to permitting siting, fencing, etc.) may apply, as Jackson
County, Oregon has done.2e
The Department of Environmental Health for the
City and County of Denver, Colorado developed a com-
prehensive guide to best practices on energy, water,
and waste management for indoor growing facilities.3o
Though specifically developed in context of Denver's
sustainability goals, climate, and infrastructure, it
provides useful overviews and metrics for the resource
systems involved in cultivation.
Local governments will likely apply building and
fire safety codes to regulate potential environmental
nuisances and safety concerns related to lighting and
compliance. Light pollution from outdoor cultivation,
volatile extraction processes in manufacturing facilities,
and the extent of personal cultivation allowed in mul-
tifamily facilities are all issues that local governments
have dealt with using local codes.
Aesthetics
Finally, local governments will want to consider cannabis'
implications on aesthetics of the natural and built envi-
ronment. Jackson County, home to a significant share of
Oregon's cannabis production, provides an aerial view of
the use's significant impact on its landscape.3l lllegal, and
to a lesser extent legal, grow operations there pose chal-
lenges to maintaining government survey corners, ripar-
ian buffers, and drainage. Municipalities may be more
concerned about signage, fencing, and generally ensur-
ing that the cannabis industry not overtake the charac-
ter of an urban or suburban environment. Fort Collins,
Colorado prohibited the use of cannabis-affiliated
phrases and images in signs for cannabis businesses.
Many municipalities prevent the creation of a cannabis
district through clustering by including some method of
business-to-business setbacks in their regulations. Alter-
natively, others intend to cluster all cannabis businesses
in one or few districts, in order to prevent siting in the
majority of the municipality while ceding only part.
Summary and Recommendations
Based on our research, ICMA offers the following recom-
mendations to local governments considering whether
and/or how to allow commercial cannabis activities.
1. Assess the federal, state, regional, and loca!
contexts foryour decision(s). While the letter of
federal cannabis law has not changed for some
time, interpretation and enforcement priorities
continue to shift. But more urgent are condi-
tions at the state level and below. Some sample
questions to consider:
a. Does current or pending state law prescribe
any decision points? Mustyou opt in or out of
defoult situottons?
b. How did your community vote on past can-
nabis ballot measures? Do those results entitle
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 7
you to different powers (such os the ability to tox
or the obility to impose a complete bon)? Does
your community leon one way or the other in its
opinion on connobis?
c. What's happening in surrounding communi-
ties that may impact you? Are the county ond
its municipalihes talking with eoch other about
this issue? Are your priorihes complementary or
in conflict?
d. To what extent can you lean on state regu-
lations and enforcement? Are regulotions
speciftc enough? Do you believe resources are
odequate to perform state-level responsibilities?
2. Assemble a diverse, coordinated leadership
team. Local administrations successf u lly navigat-
ing the early legal cannabis landscape credited
clear, steady direction from their elected officials-
including rationale or objectives for local regula-
tion-as extremely helpful.32 ln addition to elected
officials and chief administrative officers, planning,
police, legal, and finance staff tended to serue in
critical leadership roles. But cast a wide net across
your organization, as the industry has potential to
impact many additional systems and functions.
3. Plan for deliberate, transparent community
engagement. Even communities voting strongly
in favor of cannabis legalization can still struggle
with implementation.33 Provide multiple ways
outside of formal meetings and public hearings
for community members to review and com-
ment on potential regulations, such as com-
munity surveys or other online platforms and
in neighborhood/commu nity-wide events.3a
Expect questions, expect fears, and be willing
to demonstrate how proposed regulations have
accounted for community concerns. Maps show-
ing eligible locations for cannabis businesses
as well as sensitive uses are very helpful tools,
as are summaries of key steps taken and refer-
ence documents posted on your website. While
time-consuming, local governments following
this model were comfortable reflecting on their
processes and were later able to make decisions
without signifi cant debate.
4. Regularly monitor indicators and review your
regulations. This is a new industry that will con-
tinue to experience growing pains, especially as
the state and federal context continue to shift.
While states and local governments adopting
early legislation are beginning to generate data,
figures should still be considered preliminary.
Even in states where legalization passed sev-
eral years earlier, businesses are just starting
to open, following long processes to develop
regulations and process applications, and local
leaders are standing by to watch for indications
that the industry needs more (or less) regulation.
"Start early and walk a slow path," suggested one
California city manager-a sentiment echoed
by many of his peers'actions. Be wary of doors
that are difficult to close once opened; consider
sunset provisions or temporary caps as ways to
test your local market and assure residents that
you will continue to revisit regulations and make
adjustments as necessary.
Endnotes
1 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Mar'rjuana Laws.'
http: //www. ncs l.o rsl bookstore/state-legislatu res- ma eazin e/
ma riiuana -d eep-d ive.a s px
2 Drug Enforcement Administration, 'Drug Scheduling.' https://
www.dea.Eov/druginf o/ds.shtml
3 Of6ce of the Attorney General, "Memorandum for All United
States Attorneys, Subject Marijuana Enforcement," )anuary 4,
2018. https://www.iustice.sov/opalpress-release/fi lel 1022 196l
download
4 Abigail Geiger, 'About six-in-ten Americans support marijuana
legalization,' Pew Research Center. http://www.pewresearch.
orelfact-tan k/20 18/0 1 /05 /america ns-support- ma rii uan a-
legalization/
5 Daniel Shortt, -Mar'rjuana, Marihuana and Mariguana: What's in
a Name?," University of Washington Cannabis Law and Policy
Blog, January 21, 2016. hltps: // bloesuw.edu / cloo / 2016 /Ol / 27 /
ma riiu a na- ma rih u a na -a nd - ma ripua na-wh ats- in -a-na m e/
6 Julie Martens Forney, 'Will Mar'rjuana Cultivation Affect Floral
lndustry?,' Society of American Florists, July 26,2077. hltos://
saf now.orelwill-mariiuana-cultivation-aff ect-fl oral-industry/
7 t<ety Ward, "Truro farmers want to cultivate cannabis," Wicked
Local - Provincetown, February 24, 2078. http://provincetown.
wickedloca l. co m / news/ 20780224 /truro-f armers-want-to-
cultivate-cannabis
8 Richard Fausset, "A Dying Southern Town Needed a Miracle.
Marijuana Came Calling.,'The New York Times, March 24,2018.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/24lus/arkansas-mariiuana-
cotton-plant.html
9 Washington State lnstitute for Public Poliry, 'Employment
and Wage Earnings in Licensed Marijuana Businesses,'
June 2077. http://www.wsipo.wa.sov/ReoortFile/1669lWsipp
Employment-a n d -Wage- Earn ines-in - Licen sed - M a riiuana -
Businesses Report.pdf
10 City of Santa Rosa Planning and Economic Development,
"Cannabis Program FAQs" March 15, 2018. https://srcitv.orsl
DocumentCenter/View/18729lCannabis-FAQs 2018-03-
15?bidrd=
11 Colorado Tourism Office, "Colorado Tourism Sets All-Time
Records for Sixth Consecutive Yeari )une 28, 2017. https://www.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS8
colorado.com/news/colorado-tourism-sets-all-time-records-
sixth-consecutive-vear
12 Christian M. Wade, *Tourism Officials wrestle with marijuana
marketing,'The Daily News of Newburyport, January 8, 2018.
http://www.newburvportnews.com/news/tourism-of f icial s-
wrestle-with-mariiuana-marketing/article cc0100b4-eab5-
5 ef d -b 7 14 -b27 8 52107 e3c.html
13 Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment,
"Responsibility Starts with Knowing the Laws.' http://
responsibilitvgrowshere.com/laws
14 Washington State Office of Financial Management, "Monitoring
lmpacts of Recreational Mar'rjuana Legalization,' March 2077.
https://www.of m.wa. gov/sites/def ault/f iles/oublic/l esacv/
reports/mariiuana impacts update 2016.pdf
15 Washington State lnstitute for Public Policy, "l-502 Evaluation
and Benefit-Cost Analysis," September 2017. http://www.wsipp.
wa.gov/ReportFile/1670lWsipp l-502-Evaluation-and-Benefi t-
Cost-Analvsis-Second-Required-Reoort Report.pdf
16 Police Foundation and the Colorado Association of Chiefs of
Police, 'Colorado's Legalizatoin of Marijuana and the lmpact
on Public Safety," 2015. https://www.nccpsafetv.orglassets/
files/library/Leealized Mariiuana Practical Guide for Law
Enforcement.pdf
17 There have been multiple instances of people committing violent
marijuana-related crime in west coast rural unincorporated areas
where marijuana is grown, incentivized by the high street value
of marijuana on the east coast. Jackson County, Oregon, and
Sonoma County, California, have experienced this phenomenon
in recent months, where multiple groups have driven from east
coast states in order to rob rural marijuana growers.
18 County of Santa Barbara, 'Cannabis Land Use Ordinance and
Licensing Program Final Environmental lmpact Report," December
2017. http://lonsrange.sbcountvplarrnirre.orelprosrams/cannabis,/
Environmental/FEIR/lndividual%20Sections/3.12 Traffic SBC
CannabisElR FElR.pdf
19 Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen!
"Marijuana use trends and health effects." https://www.colorado.
gov/cd p h e /m a ri i ua na - h ea lth - re port
20 Washington State Office of Financial Management, 'Monitoring
lmpacts of Recreational Marijuana Legalization," March 2077.
https://www.of m.wa.eovlsites/def ault/f iles/public/legacv/
reports/mariiuana impacts update 2016.pdf
21 Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment,
'Mar'rjuana Use Among Youth in Colorado, Healthy Kids Colorado
Survey 2015.,' https://www.colorado.sovlpacific/sites/default/
files/PF Youth HKCS MJ-lnfoeraphic-Disital.pdf
22 National lnstitute of Drug Abuse, 'ls Mar'rjuana Addictive?i
June 2018. https://www.drueabuse.gov/publications/research-
reports/mariiuana/mariiuana-addictive
23 National lnstitute of DrugAbuse,.ls Marijuana a Gateway Drug?i
June 2018. https://www.drueabuse.govloublications/research-
reports/mariiuana/mariiuana-gatewav-drug
24 National lnstitute of Drug Abuse, \ly'hat are Marijuana Effects?,"
June 2018. https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-
reports/mariiua nalwhat-are-mariiuana-eff ects
25 Police Foundation and the Colorado fusociation of Chiefs of
Police, "Colorado's Legalizatoin of Mar'rjuana and the lmpact
on Public Safety," 2015. https://www.nccpsafetv.orelassets/
lca Guid for Law
Enforcement.pdf
26 Washington State Office of Financial Management, "Monitoring
lmpacts of Recreational Marijuana Legalization," March 2077.
https://www.of m.wa.eov/sites/default/f iles/public/leeacv/
reports/mariiuana impacts update 2016.pdf
27 Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment,
'Marijuana use trends and health effectsl httos://www.colorado.
gov/cdphe/mariiuana-health-reoort
28 Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, 'Permitting
of marijuana businesses." https://www.oregon.eovldeq/
Regulations/Pages/Mariiuana-Regulation.aspx
29 Jackon County Development Services, "Marijuana Production in
Jackson County FAQf July 27, 2018. http://iacksoncountvor.orsl
dsl Genera l/ Ma riiua na
30 City and County of Denver Department of Environmental
Health, "Cannabis Environmental Best Management Practices
Guide.' https://www.denvereov.orelcontent/dam/denvergov/
Portals/771ldocuments/EQ/MJ%2OSustainabilitv/Best%20
P r a ch ces%2OM an a eem e nt%2OG ui d e%2ow eb%20 - %2Ofi n al.p df
31 Jackon County,'JC Potpourri: Mar'rjuana in Southern Oregon -
Growing Pains," May 10, 2077. http://iacksoncountyor.
orelCou ntv/Vi deo-TV/Cou n ty-Close-Up/ArtM I D/1 1580/
ArticlelD / 249 662 / JC-Potoo u rri- Ma riiua na-in-Southern -
Oreeon-Growinq-Pains
32 See, for example, Santa Rosa, California case study
33 See, for example, Kirkland, Washington case study
34 See, for example, Battle Creek, Michigan (https://battlecreekmi.
sov/637lMedical-Marihuana) or Carpinteria, California case
study
f ilc</lihrerrr/l eo:lizpd trzl:riir r ana Pr:rf
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS I
n
The following case studies
describe the motivations,
processes, and decisions of
10 local governments to
regulate commercial cannabis
activities in their communities.
Though selected from states
with longer histories of
recreational and medical
cannabis laws, these local
governments a re continuing
to monitor the industry and
adapt their strategies.
i'-
\..
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I
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City and County
The City of Carpinteria has instituted a moratorium on
legal marijuana businesses through May 2079 while it
continues a deliberate process of determining regula-
tions for the city. ln contrast, Santa Barbara County
Population l2Ot7l: 73,622
Land area (in sq. miles): 2.59
Median Household lncome: $72,901
Source: United States Census Bureou
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 11
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CASE STUDY:
Ca rpintera, Ca lifornia
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Carpinteria is bordered by the Pacific Ocean to
the southwest and rural oceanside hills to the
southeast, while the areas north and northwest
of the city are agricultural zones dotted with
greenhouses primarily for the cut flower indus-
try. That industry was once a thriving sector in
California's economy, but many years of com-
petition have decimated it. Greenhouses that
once grew flowers are now prime real estate for
recreational cannabis cu ltivation.
The marijuana industry has been moving into Car-
pinteria Valley greenhouses foryears, but the pace of
turnover increased once flower growers began to look
for more profitable ventures. Some greenhouse tenants
and owners turned to growing vegetables or even stayed
with flowers, but many others have converted to grow-
ing cannabis or sold their stake to someone who does.
a
,-t
moved quickly to establish regulations for allowing culti-
vation and other cannabis businesses as soon as Cali-
fornia licensing became available. Santa Barbara County
is the home of the most cannabis cultivation licenses
in California, outpacing the counties of Humboldt,
Mendocino, and Trinity, counties known for their mari-
juana cultivation.l All of those licenses in the vicinity
of Carpinteria, many of which were originally granted
for growing medical marijuana, lie on Santa Barbara
County unincorporated land. Carpinteria's incorporated
area does not include the agricultural portion of the
Carpinteria Valley, and the city does not regulate it.
After the passage of Proposition 64 in November
2016, Santa Barbara County first began the process of
deciding how to approach locally regulating the canna-
bis industry. At that point, Carpinteria city officials were
poised to work alongside Santa Barbara County officials
and attended multiple meetings with county officials
on the subject. However, it soon became clear that the
city and the county were guided by different philoso-
phies. Carpinteria's interest in potentially allowing and
regulating cannabis businesses stemmed from public
support within the community, but city officials and
residents were, and still are, in favor of a cautious and
deliberate approach to developing regulations. Santa
Barbara County was under pressure to quickly establish
its regulations in order to limit the impact from a large
and growing number of unregulated or black-market
cannabis operations, generate revenues, and create a
commercially viable cannabis market as an alternative
to lost jobs in the cut flower industry.2
These differences in approach forced Carpinteria
into a reactionary position. As Santa Barbara County
proceeded with its big-picture approach through the
summer of 2077, tension was high in Carpinteria from
a frustrating process of legal proceedings. The city
was able to extract some of what it wanted from the
county, such as a cap on greenhouse canopy size and a
prohibition on outdoor cultivation.
Currently, the area's cannabis cultivation indus-
try is operating in the California Coastal Zone, which
includes the Carpinteria Valley, through county-issued
interim permits until the formal permitting, regulation,
and revenue-collection process passed by Santa Bar-
bara County undergoes a legal review by the California
Coastal Commission. Cannabis operations in Santa
Barbara County outside the Coastal Zone are operating
under the county's land use code and Cannabis Busi-
ness License Ordinance as of June 2018.3
Preserving the Character of Carpinteria
Cut Flower lndustry
The Carpinteria Valley cut flower industry had been
struggling for years due to international competition.
Low-wage workforces in South and Central America
left California flower growers unable to compete on
price, leaving many as the owners and lessees of empty
greenhouses. A number of those greenhouse owners
and lessees turned to cannabis cultivation due to the
high value of the crop. The first to convert were medi-
cal cannabis cultivators under the previous regime of
California medical cannabis law. Local governments had
little to no regulatory or administrative authority over
these operations, leaving unfixed problems that were
generally foreign to flower growers, such as noxious
odors and security issues. As Santa Barbara County
registers and regulates these operations under the new
commercial cannabis regulatory regime, those issues
should subside.
Cannabis greenhouse
Economic Equilibrium
The City of Carpinteria's interest in strengthening the
county's cap on cannabis cultivation is twofold. One
concern is ensuring that agriculture in the Carpinte-
ria Valley is not dedicated to a single use. The flower
industry decline was especially painful as most green-
houses were entirely dependent on it.
Community character and aesthetics comprise the
second motivating factor for a cap. ln 2002, Santa
Barbara County enacted an ordinance to preserve
open field agriculture and limit unsightly piecemeal
greenhouse construction, but Carpinteria was con-
cerned that a lack of a regulatory cap on cannabis
cultivation could undermine that ordinance. A boom-
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS12
a
a
It
:
rRl I
ing cannabis cultivation industry could potentially take
over the Carpinteria Valley's available greenhouses
and increase the demand for the construction of even
more greenhouses.
At this point in its lifecycle, the cannabis cultivation
industry has different effects on local economic activity
than the cut flower industry. Observations from Car-
pinteria show that cannabis cultivation generates less
intensive industrial traffrc than cut flowers. However,
that may be offset by increased traffic from laborers.
Greenhouse cannabis cultivation uses approximately
595 square feet per worker (FTE), compared to (conser-
vatively) 38,314 square feet per worker for cut flower
growing.a This discrepancy is confirmed anecdotally
in Carpinteria, with far more cars parked outside the
greenhouses that have moved to cannabis cultivation
as opposed to those growing flowers or vegetables.
Odor
Medical cannabis has been growing and generating
odor just outside Carpinteria city limits for the past few
years, but the problem worsened when recreational
cannabis was authorized. Agriculture is typically not
subject to odor complaints under Right to Farm pro-
tections, and Santa Barbara County regulated medical
cannabis cultivation in this manner as well.s This led
to an underenforcement of nuisances like odor and
the lack of a regulatory infrastructure at the onset of
recreational cannabis, with many residents voicing their
complaints. Carpinteria High School, across the street
from several greenhouses that cultivate cannabis, was
forced to air out classrooms and send home students
who were negatively impacted by the odor.6
The odor situation has improved in Carpinteria over
the past year as some of the greenhouse cannabis
cultivators have started to take steps to prevent odors,
investing significantly in odor mitigation technology.
Santa Barbara County cited evidence from San Diego
and established Carpinteria cultivators showing this
technology, called a Vapor-Phase System, to be effec-
tive in mitigating odors from greenhouse cannabis
cultivation facilities.T There are limited number of
greenhouses continuing to emit strong odors and oper-
ate without the preventative measures. Those green-
houses will either be required to mitigate odors in order
to become compliant or will be shut down once Santa
Barbara County begins to regulate cultivators within
the Coastal Zone following the review by the California
Coastal Commission.
Key Observations
The City of Carpinteria prohibited all commercial activ-
ity in the previous medical cannabis regulatory regime,
but the city will potentially allow some commercial
cannabis operations once their new regulations are
developed and adopted. Those operations will likely
be limited to manufacturing and testing to comple-
ment the already existing cultivation in the Carpinteria
Valley. The Carpinteria City Council is not currently
inclined to allow recreational cannabis retail stores and
believes they would cause neighborhood problems, an
assumption based on observing the previous iteration
of medical cannabis stores that existed under the ear-
lier state regulations. The council's preferred approach
is to watch the results of recreational cannabis store-
fronts in other cities before deciding whether to allow
them in Carpinteria.
Although Carpinteria's long-term priorities are clear,
City Manager David Durflinger notes that it is chal-
lenging for a small local government to develop the
expertise necessary to both interact in a regulatory
process with an adjoining county and to develop its
own regulations.
lnterviewee:
David Durflinger, City Monoger
Endnotes
1 Brooke Staggs, "So far, California has 6,000 licensed
cannabis businesses. Here's what that look like,' The Orange
County Register. Agril 27, 2018. https://www.ocresister.
com/2018/04/27lso-far-calif ornia-has-6000-licensed-cannabis-
bus i n esses - h eres-what- that-loo ks- I i ke /
2 Bozanich, Dennis, email to Will Fricke, July 9,2018.
3 County of Santa Barbara, "Cannabis Amendments to County
Ordinance Now in Effect," June 7,2078. http://cannabis.
cou ntvof sb.orglnews-events. sbc
4 William A. Matthews, Daniel A. Sumner, Josu6 Medellin-Azuara,
and Tristan Hanon, 'Economics of the California Cut Flower
lndustry and Potential lmpacts of Legal Cannabis,' University of
California Agricultural lssues Center, August 30,2077.
5 County of Santa Barbara, "Final Environmental lmpact Report
(ElR) for the Cannabis Land Use Ordinance and Licensing
Program," Page 8-13, December 2017
6 David Durflinger, interviewed by Laura Goddeeris and Will Fricke,
)une26,2Ot8
7 County of Santa Barbara, "Final Environmental lmpact Report
(ElR) for the Cannabis Land Use Ordinance and Licensing
Programi Page 8-7, December 2017
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCTAL CANNABIS 13
The City of Durango is located along a historic
railway and the Animas River at the foot of the
San Juan Mountains in southwest Colorado.
Home to 18,000 residents and a key destination
in the Four Corners region, tourists and commut-
ers nearly double its population daily.
An lndustry Emerges
ln 2000, La Plata County and the City of Durango
voters strongly supported an amendment to Colo-
rado's state constitution legalizing medical cannabis.
However, nearly a decade would pass before any
legal commercial activity materialized due to uncer-
tainty surrounding federal preemption. The Obama
administration's initial issuance of guidelines for
states with legal medical cannabis, which indicated
that the Department of Justice would not prioritize
prosecutions, provided a long-awaited green light to
would-be operators.
Durango's staff was caught off-guard when the first
business approached the clerk's office for a canna-
bis license in 2009. Quick consultations with the city
attorney and administration confirmed a lack of any
local restrictions at the outset, resulting in the issuance
Population l2lt7 Census Estimate):
79,465
Land Area (square miles): 9.92
Median Household lncome: $60,334
Source: United States Census Bureau
CASE STUDY:
Durango, Colorado
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14 LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS
of four early commercial medical licenses at just $50
apiece (the general business license fee)-including to
one cultivation operation.
This triggered an exhaustive process to determine
the appropriate zoning, fees, and other local restric-
tions on such businesses. Multiple moratoria were
implemented while the city engaged in research and
discussion. While initial discussions were limited to
medical marijuana, the legalization of recreational
marijuana in2072 extended the conversation such
that the city was actively working on some aspect
of local marijuana issues all the way through the end
of 2077.
Though Durango residents voted in support of legal-
ization in both 2000 and 2072, the process to develop
regu lations was contentious. ldentifyi ng appropriate
setbacks from sensitive uses such as schools, daycare
centers, and parks proved especially challenging, as the
default state standards did not align well with the city's
long and linear orientation and needed to be reduced
(either by right or with a variance) in order to provide
enough options for businesses. Other major concerns
included the location and number of businesses within
the Central Business District, potential issues with
lights used by cultivators, and security and fire code
compliance. Recognizing that land use decisions can be
hard to revert once a door is opened, city staff feel this
discussion was worthwhile.
The most significant progress was made in 2014,
when a series of ordinances were passed establishing
comprehensive land use standards and a local licens-
ing process for commercial medical/nonmedical retail
and testing businesses. License fees increased to as
much as $fO,OOO for a new business and $8,000 for a
renewal every year.1 Commercial cultivation and manu-
facturing of infused products were prohibited based on
a shared understanding with La Plata County about the
types of uses best suited to county and city land.
Since then, the city has received annexation requesG
that would extend water and sewer services to mari-
juana cultivators located on fringe land. Following dis-
cussions with staff, the planning commission, and the
city council, the city decided to extend water and sewer
services in exchange for long-term control of land use
planning. Reasoning that users-including marijuana
cultivators-could come and go, city officials believed
it would be advantageous to apply the city's more rigor-
ous requirements for elements such as sidewalks, street
trees, and signage.
r-
Cannabis dispensary
A Regulated lndustry: lnitial lmpressions
Though the city did not place explicit caps on the
number of licenses allowed and did loosen some of
the setback requirements, prospective businesses still
had trouble finding locations because property own-
ers were reluctant to lease for such uses. As a result,
businesses were forced to turn to purchasing their own
property at premium prices.
For those businesses that were able to secure loca-
tions, the initial licensing and enforcement process was
challenging as the state provided little guidance and the
rules continued to evolve. Durango's liquor licensing
authority expanded its oversight to include marijuana
licensing and devoted time to screening and rejecting
applications from businesses whose employees had
histories of criminal activity. Eventually, the city con-
cluded that decision could be left to the operators who
could be expected to act in the best interest of their
legal businesses.
Code enforcement was also intense at first to ensure
businesses were operating in line with the newly estab-
lished regulations. While he can recall scattered specific
incidents of crimes tied to marijuana activities in the
early days of statewide legalization, City Manager
Ron LeBlanc is not persuaded of a significant negative
impact on public safety. From an enforcement perspec-
tive, staff feel the industry has actually been easier to
regulate than liquor licenses.
Though Durango did not pursue a dedicated local
tax on mar'rjuana as a part of its 2074 regulations,
the standard 3-percent local sales tax still applied to
the industry. Revenues from marijuana businesses
exceeded local expectations, suggesting the black mar-
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 15
tl.a ll
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T
1
ket had been much larger than the city had anticipated.
Total sales and use taxes collected by the city jumped
by approximately $1 million from 2Ot4 to 2015.2
The cash-based nature of those taxpayers presented
an additional complication for Durango City Hall, which
was not a fully secure facility when marijuana busi-
nesses frrst started to pay local taxes. Though security
has since changed, finance staff were unnerved when
the first businesses showed up to pay monthly tax bills
with stacks of cash, and parking staff needed to accom-
pany them when making transfers to the bank.
The lndustry Matures
With no new business applications submitted in the
last two years, the industry appears to have reached
market saturation in Durango. Prices are coming down,
businesses are consolidating, and protests from the
vocal minority opposed to the industry have faded.
Durango's administration believes the impact on
tourism has been a net positive, noting a steady stream
of creative business proposals for transportation and
green tourism experiences over the last few years. At
the same time, ample restrictions on consumption,
including in private social clubs, help to keep use out of
public view.
ln 2077, with marijuana sales responsible for about
$825,000 in sales tax revenue-just over 3 percent of
the city's total sales tax collected-Durango floated the
possibility of a dedicated mar'rjuana excise tax.3 Already
burdened with a significant increase in the State of
Colorado's tax rate (with no additional pass-through
to local governments), the industry responded in force
against the proposal and city leaders were forced to
abandon those plans.
Key Observations
Durango's 2077 altempt to further raise revenues from
its successful marijuana businesses with a specific
excise tax was met with strong industry opposition.
Local governments should consider these issues early,
before new taxes would burden the industry.
The marijuana black market in and around Durango
was much larger and more active than the city realized,
evident from the higher-than-predicted sales tax rev-
enue. At the same time, other local governments have
seen tax revenues fall short of expectations. Rather
than predicting a specific number, a wide range of pos-
sible tax revenues should be analyzed.
lnterviewees:
Ron LeBlanc, City Manoger
Amber Blake, Assistant City Manager
Dirk Nelson, City Attorney
Amy Phillips, City Clerk
Chris Harlow, Deputy City Clerk
Ben Florine, Deputy City Clerk
Suzonne Sifter, Legol Coordinator
Endnotes
1 City of Durango, 'Licensing of Marijuana Businesses.' http://
www.durangogov.orglindex.aspx?NlD=181
2 City of Durango, -Sales & Use Tax Combined,'June 14, 2018.
hEp://www.duf arrgqgqv.orelArchiveCent
3 City of Durango, 'Sales Tax Collections For Twelve Months Ending
December 2017.' http://www.durangoeov.orglArchiveCenter/
ViewFile/ltem/315
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS16
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Fort Collins is a city in northern Colorado known
for its picturesque landscape, craft breweries,
and bicycle culture. Home of Colorado State
University and campuses for the technology
companies Hewlett-Packard, lntel, and Agilent,
the city of 164,000 has made strides in smart city
utilities innovations.
ln 2000, Colorado voters passed Amendment 20,
legalizing small amounts of medical marijuana in the
state. A July 2009 language change by the Colorado
Board of Health in the state medical mar'rjuana law
removed patient limits on medical marijuana caregiv-
ers, allowing them to become de facto dispensaries.l
The change caused a rush in requests for the types of
licenses that would allow people to be medical mar'rjuana
caregivers, such as home occupation licenses.
ln December of 2OtO, Fort Collins enacted an
emergency moratorium in order to end the rush of
medical marijuana dispensaries, which had quickly
outpaced the city's desire to evaluate and regulate
this new business type.
ln March of 2077, the Fort Collins City Council took
action to proceed with licensing dispensaries, cultiva-
tion, and the entire medical marijuana process. By Octo-
Population lzOtTlz 1 65,080
Land Area (square miles): 54.28
Median Household lncome: $57,831
Source: United Stotes Census Bureou
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS t7
CASE STUDY:
Fort Collins, Colorado
a
ber that year, Fort Collins was home to approximately
twenty medical marijuana dispensaries.
The dispensaries were short-lived. ln the odd-year
election, Fort Collins voters passed a citizen-initiated
ballot measure to ban all medical marijuana activities in
the city. Enforcement was completed by February 2072.
The ban on medical marijuana lasted just one month
longer than the first iteration of allowing dispensaries.
ln the 2012 election, another citizen-initiated ballot
measure brought back the medical marijuana dispensa-
ries. This city-wide ballot measure was separate from
and concurrent with Colorado's Amendment 64, which
legalized adult recreational use and retail sales through-
out the state. However, since Amendment 64 included
a local government opt-in provision, Fort Collins staff
was able to focus on medical marijuana before taking
on retail sales. Following the conclusion of the medi-
cal marijuana reinstatement, the City Council adopted
regulations for a limited recreational marijuana business
license process.
Regulations
The second citizen-initiated ballot measure for medi-
cal marijuana built in a cap for dispensaries tied to the
number of cardholders: one medical marijuana dispen-
sary would be allowed for every 5O0 medical marijuana
cardholders in Larimer County. This cap was proposed
by marijuana proponents as a way to make the second
iteration of medical marijuana more palatable for the
electorate. Currently, there are enough medical mari-
juana cardholders to allow for nine medical dispensaries
in Fort Collins. However, due to a provision that grand-
fathered in any dispensary that had been shut down in
February 2012, eleven licenses have been granted to
medical marijuana dispensaries, ten of which also have
a retail-recreational marijuana license.
Since Fort Collins requires a medical marijuana
dispensary license before granting a retail dispensary
license, the cap also acts as a limit on recreational mari-
juana licenses.
Fort Collins also grants cultivation licenses, but only
to holders of another mar'rjuana business license, such
as retail or manufacturing. Personal cultivation in homes
with shared walls, sheds, or detached garages and in
mixed-use buildings is also banned in Fort Collins, due
to safety and odor concerns. Greenhouses, while not
banned, must follow the requirement that cultivation
only be done in a "locked and enclosed" space. They are
de facto banned for non-commercial cultivation, due to
the requirement that personal use cultivation not take
place in outbuildings.
Despite these regulations, Fort Collins still has to
combat illegal and unlicensed cultivation. Fort Collins'
marijua na enforcement ofhcer investigated approxi-
mately fifty complaints in 2O!7 and is on track to meet
that number in 2018.
Fort Collins took additional steps to manage the
divided community by restricting the locations of busi-
ness through zoning, implementing setback require-
ments, and regulating the type and level of advertising
that dispensaries can utilize.
Far exceeding the stote's restrict ons, Fort Collins
broadly bans signage ond odvertrsing thot would
cleorly associate the locatton with marijuona, as
well as prohibihng portable advertising such as
leoflets, flyers, and handheld signs.2
While the regulations are stringent and specifrc, they
are not always easy to enforce, especially when it comes
to odor complaints. Lots of industrial warehouse space
in Fort Collins has been bought or rented for marijuana-
related activity, creating clusters of marijuana busi-
nesses. Due to the way in which the spaces are divided
and located, it can be difficult to pinpoint the source of
odor issues.
Staffing
Fort Collins convenes an interdepartmental taskforce
with representation from the frre department, plan-
ning department, clerks, police, and other depart-
ments as appropriate. This task force monitors the
marijuana environment in Fort Collins and Colorado as
a whole and makes recommendations to the council
on any changes needed to the marijuana code, stem-
ming from everything from upcoming state legislation
to nuisance indicators.
Fort Collins hired an outside attorney through an
open bid to serve as the retail marijuana licensing
authority. The attorney performs duties such as receiv-
ing applications, making decisions on whether to grant
licenses, and leading hearings. The cost of the attorney
is covered through licensing fees. Fort Collins hired
an outside attorney to perform these tasks because
the municipaljudge, who is also the liquor licensing
authority, declined the authority to do so based on
her workload.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS18
The city has a single police officer dedicated to mari-
juana enforcement who performs pre-inspections and
spot inspections. Originally, inspections were conducted
by police officers who were not able to go out on patrol
due to injuries, causing the task to be seen as undesir-
able. The dedicated marijuana enforcement officer, a
well-respected and long-time Fort Collins police officer,
emphasizes relationship building with license holders as
well as the state marijuana enforcement division.
The Colorado General Assembly creates new types
of marijuana licenses annually. Fort Collins has lobbied
at the state level to ensure that these new licenses have
opt-in provisions at the local level. With local govern-
ment opt-ins, the Fort Collins task force has the ability
to review new license options and weigh community
impacts when determining whether to allow them.
Recent examples include the addition of a research
license, which was desired by a local start-up com-
pany. The task force decided that the impact from the
research license was manageable, as this license does
not allow for the selling of marijuana and involves only
a small number of plants. Alternatively, Fort Collins
decided against approving a license for off-premises
storage based on a task force recommendation. Addi-
tional storage of large quantities of marijuana was seen
as undesirable by the task force, and the Fort Collins
marijuana businesses did not express the need for this
type of license.
A Community Divided and the
lndustryToday
Fort Collins residents are often split on issues, and
marijuana has been no different. ln the heavily values-
based debate during the back-and-forth bans of 2077
and 2O!2, opponents of legal marijuana painted a
doom-and-gloom picture while proponents focused on
health aspects of medical marijuana and argued that
prohibition is ineffective at reducing illegal activity.
Years later, with new regulations in place, mar'rjuana
remains a lightning rod and a complex issue in Fort Col-
lins. To avoid controversy and regulation fatigue, staff
and the task force package issues together for council
action, even for issues as simple as ordinance clean-up.
While opposition still exists in the community, the
industry has been able to mature. City staff describe
businesses as increasingly professional and better able
to control for issues like odor and underage purchasing.
Development pressure on industrial land is palpable,
but restrictions on licenses keep growth in check.
Key Observations
Fort Collins goes a long way to ensure that residents
opposed to marijuana businesses are not burdened
or bothered by them. These efforts are evident in the
city's advertising restrictions, cultivation requirements,
and method of bringing issues to the Council. Overall,
the thinking in Fort Collins is to keep marijuana compli-
ant with an "out of sight, out of mind" philosophy.
By tying the number of dispensaries allowed to the
number of medical cardholders in the county, Fort Col-
lins was able to balance allowing marijuana businesses,
in compliance with the results of the initiative, with
managing the number of businesses. When considering
additional types of licenses, Fort Collins checks with
the existing businesses on what licenses they need
and only approves what is needed. lnstituting a needs-
based cap on businesses and only allowing the licenses
that existing businesses need, the city is better able to
manage industry growth.
Through appropriate preparation, task-specifi c staff-
ing, collaboration, and bringing in outside help, Fort
Collins was able to properly manage its in-demand
marijuana industry without being overwhelmed, as well
as cover a significant portion of the costs of regulating
the industry.
lnterviewee:
Ginny Sowyer, Policy & Project Monoger
Endnotes
1 "Auraria crowd stands up for access to medical marijuana," Denver
Post, May 6, 2076. https://www.denveroost.com/2oO9 /O7 /2O/
auraria-crowd-stands-up-for-access-to-medical-mariiuana/
2 See the Article XIV of the Fort Collins Municipal Code, which
implements provisions of the Colorado Medical Marijuana
Code (httos://librarv.municode.com/colfort collins/codes/
municipal code?nodeld=CHI5LlBURE ARTXVIMEMA) and
Article )O/ll, which implements provisions of the Colorado Retail
Marijuana Code (https://library.municode.com/colfort collins/
codes/municipal code?nojeld=CH I5LIBURE,ARTXVIlREMA
DIv3LtFEREPR S15-6175tAD).
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 19
Grover Beach is a small bedroom community on
California's Central Coast, located along the iconic
Pacific Coast Highway 1 and U.S. Highway 101,
halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
The seaside city, along with the neighboring cit-
ies of Pismo Beach and Arroyo Grande and the
wineries of San Luis Obispo County, is a popular
tourist destination.
The City of Grover Beach's initial efforts to regulate
commercial cannabis activities trace back to late 2015,
after the state passed a package of bills outlining new
medical cannabis regulations. California local govern-
ments were under the direction from the state to
pass land use regulations that regulated or prohibited
commercial medical cannabis activities; if local govern-
ments did not do so, the state would become the sole
licensing authority in that municipality. The ultimatum
caused many local governments, including Grover
Beach, to pass indefinite or permanent moratoriums on
commercial medical cannabis activities by the state's
March 1, 2016 deadline.
While the moratorium was in effect, the Grover
Beach City Council directed City Manager Matthew
Population l2ot7 Census Estimate):
13,628
Land Area (square miles): 2.3
Median Household !ncome: $58,895
Source: United Stotes Census Bureou
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS20
CASE STUDY:
Grover Beach, C?lifornia
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Bronson and his staff to draft regulations and a pro-
posed tax structure for the purpose of allowing com-
mercial medical cannabis activities in the future. Such
activities were seen by the City Council as an economic
opportunity for the city in attracting private invest-
ment and providing additionaljobs. The tax structure,
which covered both medical and recreational cannabis
businesses if also allowed by state and local laws, was
approved by 70 percent ofvoters in November 2016-
the same election in which the statewide proposition
to legalize recreational use passed.
Regulation Development
Between November 2076 and May 2O77, Grover
Beach crafted broad regulations that would allow a
wide range of commercial medical cannabis businesses
in the city. Cannabis was on the agenda of multiple
public workshops and approximately ten to fifteen
planning commission and council meetings, drawing the
largest turnout ever for a council meeting in January
2017. Public engagement has decreased substantially
over time, even though the regulations established in
MaV 2077 continue to be modified to reflect changes
made at the state level and the needs of Grover Beach.
While initial regulations were limited to commercial
medical cannabis activities only, in May 2018 they
were expanded to the recreational or adult-use market
through a series of amendments ultimately approved
on the council's consent agenda.
The city allows every type of commercial cannabis
license including cultivation, processing/manufacturing,
testing, distribution, and retail. All cultivation must be
conducted in an enclosed indoor space; both outdoor
and greenhouse cultivation are explicitly prohibited in
Grover Beach given concerns about security and ensur-
ing architectural compatibility with buildings in an indus-
trial zone. (Other cities ban greenhouse cultivation due
to operating hours enforcement and the potential for a
dispute over the defrnition of a greenhouse.)
Like some other built-out or compact cities, Grover
Beach chose to reduce certain sensitive-use setbacks-
in this case, setbacks related to youth centers. This
is because the state's default setbacks would have
resulted in a de facto ban on commercial cannabis
businesses, given the proximity of Grover Beach youth
centers to industrial zones where cannabis businesses
would otherwise be allowed. With local regulations still
restricting cannabis businesses to industrial areas, the
city felt comfortable in determining reasonable setback
requirements to address community needs.
ln addition to stringent cannabis-specific safety and
security measures that exceed the state's requirements,
Grover Beach mandates that commercial cannabis
businesses make public improvement to their proper-
ties to meet code requirements, such as fixing curbs,
sidewalks, and landscaping. This mandate is due to
commercial cannabis businesses needing a discretion-
ary use permit to operate in contrast to "allowed" uses
that do not trigger the same level of code require-
ments. City Manager Bronson described these required
improvements as an opportunity to "raise the bar" on
the development standards and aesthetics of the city's
industrial areas. Due to the strength of the retail appli-
cants and stringent regulations, Grover Beach increased
its original cap of two retail businesses set in May 2077
to a cap of four in December later that year. As of May
2018, the city has issued four retail permits and four
manufacturing permits with several other manufactur-
ing permits expected to be issued by mid-2018.
An Economic Development Opportunity
Grover Beach expects to be a production, distribution,
testing, and retail hub for boutique cannabis products
due to the city's available industrial land, proximity to
major highways, and array of products already being pro-
duced in the area. With the opening of its first cannabis
retail facility in May 2018, Grover Beach has the lone
commercial cannabis location for well over one hundred
miles.l lt is anticipated to cause a significant increase in
business from locals as well as tourists heading to the
adjacent Pismo State Beach, many of whom are from the
commercial cannabis-f ree California Central Valley.
"As a City Manoger looking at economic develop-
ment, I see the apportunity to create a cannobis
ecosystem in our community given our unique
niche in this field."
- Matthew Bronson
Grover Beach has made a market-based choice to
embrace the commercial cannabis industry in a thought-
ful and safe manner. Existing businesses in the city are
generally supporLive of the move to allow commercial
cannabis development, but there have been impacts
from this changing market condition. The intention to
create a free and open market for commercial cannabis
2tLOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS
Courtesy of Grover Beach
Opening day for Grover Beach's iirst retail cannabis establishment
has caused land value in the industrial park area to rise,
and the rent for existing business owners has risen with
it. Some businesses have had to relocate to other parts
of the city, and some have left Grover Beach entirely.
Nevertheless, the city expects a significant overall net
increase in the number of businesses, jobs, and tax rev-
enues due to the influx of commercial cannabis.
The coastal California city will be looking to multiple
metrics for judging the initial success of commercial
cannabis, mainly tax revenue and the number of new
businesses. Grover Beach's tax structure is a 5 percent-
tax on gross retail receipts and 3 percent on gross
receipts of manufacturers, distributors, and other com-
mercial uses. lt also includes a $5 per square foot tax on
cultivation uses.
One of Grover Beach's objectives was to not tax
cannabis businesses back into the underground
economy. The 5 percent tax on gross retail receipts
was originally 10 percent, as approved by the voters.
The City Council lowered the rate in order to follow
the general rule of thumb to not exceed a 3O-percent
effective tax rate on an industry. Total revenues from
commercial cannabis businesses are forecast to climb
from approximately $700,000 in the first fiscal year
toward up to $1.5 million annually once the industry
matures, which would equate to nearly 20 percent of
the city's general fund. The city conservatively esti-
mates the recent expansion to the adult-use market
may yield a 25-percent increase in revenue.
Key Observations
Grover Beach moved forward with the intention of
treating this industry as a major economic development
opportunity. The relative equidistance between Los
Angeles and San Francisco, lack of commercial canna-
bis activity in in the area, and available industrial land
marked Grover Beach as an ideal location for com-
mercial cannabis businesses to open distribution and
manufacturing operations.
While motivated by economic development, the
city's approach has been measured. Grover Beach has
leveraged its industry assets to gain additional value
from these businesses through required property
improvements. At the same time, the city has continued
to adapt its tax scheme to ensure the businesses aren't
driven back underground.
It is also worth noting perhaps the biggest risk of
making this industry part of an economic development
strategy: it exists in the shadow of the federal govern-
ment. Manager Bronson notes that any new or more
aggressive enforcement has potential for a "chilling
effect" on the industry both statewide and in Grover
Beach. The inability of cannabis businesses to use the
banking system, given federal restrictions, is also a
continued challenge given the scale of the multi-billion-
dollar cannabis industry.
Thus far, however, Grover Beach has instituted a
thorough process to develop and tweak regulations
that have helped the public and business community
to buy in. The public has since complimented the city
on how regulated the industry is, and as a result, has
been supportive of its local growth. Evidence from
this case and others suggests that starting with strin-
gent regulations on commercial cannabis, and slowly
relaxing them until the desired outcome is reached, is
a more effective method than attempting to tighten
already relaxed regulations.
lnterviewee:
Motthew Bronson, City Monager
Endnotes
1 Monica Vaughan, Brad Branan, and Nathaniel Levine, "SLO county
is a 'pot desert' now-but not for long. A dispensary will open
soon," The Tribune, March 26, 2018. http://www.sanluisobispo.
com/latest-news/article206482199.html
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS22
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Oregon was the first state to decriminalize personal possession of marijuana
in 1973, and its voters legalized medical marijuana cultivation and use in 7998
through the ballot with Measure 67. Multiple efforts to amend the state's medical
and recreational marijuana policies were proposed-and generally defeated-in
the subsequent two decades, but the dynamic changedin 2014. Citizen-initiated
Measure 91, which passed with 56 percent of the vote, authorized the commer-
cial production, sale, purchase, and possession of marijuana for adult recreational
use. lt delegated recreational marijuana oversight to the Oregon Liquor Control
Commission (OLCC) but provided for !ocal governments to establish reasonable
restrictions on the time, place, and manner in which the industry could operate in
their communities.
As illustrated by the following two cases, the implications for Oregon counties
have been distinct from those of municipalities.
23
CASE STUDY
Southern Oregon - Jackson County
and City of Ashland
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JACKSON COUNTY
Jackson County is a southwest Oregon county of
2L7,OOO residents, home to numerous vineyards,
campgrounds, and loggers. The county is part of
the Southern Oregon American Viticultural Area
and is an ideal environment for growing grapes.
Oregon has a unique land use system designed to
encourage development in incorporated cities and keep
unincorporated county land for farm and forest uses.
Since 1973, the state has maintained a progressive
farmland protection program through which counties
inventory preserve, and appropriately zone their agri-
cultural resource lands.l The state's Right to Farm Law
affords further protections from nuisance charges or
local restrictions to agricultural activity on land zoned
for such use.2 Measure 91 was amended by the state
legislature in 2Ot5 in an attempt to resolve uncertainty
about whether cannabis cultivation is a protected agri-
cultural activity and what types of regulations/restric-
tions local governments could implement. However,
this created more questions than answers. Every local
government now has its own regulations on produc-
tion of mar'rjuana; these can vary widely, which creates
state-level enforcement hardships.
Jackson County's rural residential zoning already
prohibited commercial agriculture, but Jackson County
was progressive and quick in developing its own regula-
tions for mar'tjuana production, processing, and whole-
sale and retail sales.3 The section added to its Land
Development Ordinance in 2076 includes specifica-
tions on where mar'rjuana activities can be sited, includ-
ing buffering and fencing requirements; protections
against nuisances such as odor or light pollution; and
restrictions on hours of operation. Despite allowing
most activities with appropriate regulations, the county
has faced significant challenges in the face of legaliza-
tion, largely tied to marijuana production.
Home to a number of vineyards and pear orchards
in the area known as Rogue Valley, Jackson County has
an ideal environment for agriculture.a Medford, the
county seat, averages 195 sunny days and 52 days of
precipitation per year.s The climate in Oregon, espe-
ciallyJackson and Josephine counties, has attracted
a large number of marijuana growers both before and
after legalization. Jackson County alone produces over
100 tons of medical marijuana per year as tracked by
the Oregon Health Authority; the OLCC does not yet
have a complementary system to inventory recreational
marijuana production.6 Though legalization has driven
up the value of private resource land, arable land, and
current farmland that is usable for marijuana, growers
are increasing in number, with over 1,000 licensed pro-
ducers in the state, 2O3 of which are located in Jackson
County. On the sales front, Jackson County has only
34 of Oregon's 550 licensed retailers and 15 of 724 its
licensed wholesalers.T
Since marijuana cultivation was authorized in Jack-
son County, code and planning complaints have spiked
dramatically. ln the 2016 to 2077 period, the first full
fiscal year since authorization, the county received
1,038 planning violation complaints and 425 code
enforcement complaints-45 of which went all the way
to a hearing, close to triple the normal level for the
county. ln the first 11 months of the 2077-2018 fiscal
year, Jackson County received 649 planning violation
complaints and 383 code enforcement complaints,
according to Jackson County Development Services.
Three important caveats apply to these statistics on
complaints: (1) enforcement is complaint-driven and
all complaints are investigated; (2) complaints received
related to marijuana cultivation in Jackson County are
JACKSON COUNTY
Population (20t7l: 2t7,47 9
Land area (square miles): 2,783.5
Median Household lncome: $46,343
Source: United Stotes Census Bureou
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS24
Aerial footage of Jackon C,ounty cannabis farms.
largely attributed to unauthorized growing, not to cul-
tivation that attempts to follow the established regula-
tions; and (3) many residents are hesitant to send in
complaints about illegal growing for fear of retribution,
so it is believed issues may be under-reported.s
Common complaints deal with such issues as
the following:
o Excessive use of water and light pollution
. Theft and safety concerns inlaround grow sites
r Aesthetics, odor, andlor noise
r Traffic and speeding
r Unpermitted grading, structures, uses,
and/or equipment.
The industry has left its mark on the landscape since
legalization in other ways. Surveyors must reestab-
lish government corners graded over by illegal grow-
ing; assessors have seen an uptick in applications for
farming-related tax reductions; and the surveyor's
and assessor's offices as well as the road department
face new land access challenges now that unauthor-
ized marijuana cultivation, previously hidden on public
land, has migrated to private land. Time and resources
required in following up on all of these issues and com-
plaints are significant. Though the county receives a
share of state revenue collected from the industry, that
ratio is weighted toward the number of licenses rather
than the canopy size.
Key Observations
Whether Jackson County could have avoided these
challenges is impossible to say. lmpacts are felt locally
but largely require state-level solutions. Though
increased foresight regarding the land use challenges
specific to production would have been helpful, Orego-
nians ultimately advanced legalization, and Jackson
County could not opt out of Measure 91 because less
than 55 percent ofvoters opposed the measure. The
county's local land use regulations address many of the
problematic issues associated with illegal grow sites,
providing a path to compliance, but the state's capacity
for enforcement of licensed/unlicensed operations has
been limited, constrained by the number of olllcers cur-
rently available to serve the region.
While the state's relatively young legal marijuana
industry has yet to see a market correction, that may
be about to change. Oregon producers and manufac-
turers may only sell legally in Oregon as federal law
prohibits marijuana being transported or sold over
state lines. The state reported that 550 tons of mari-
juana were produced in 2O77, but just 170 tons were
consumed.e The massive oversupply has led to a dra-
matic decrease in price, with a number of small-scale
businesses folding and the OLCC temporarily halting
new license applications while it catches up on those
already in the pipeline.lo
Each of Oregon's thirty-six counties faces a unique
set of circumstances in regulating this issue, and
Jackson County's experience is clearly influenced by its
high desirability for mar'rjuana cultivation. Because the
marijuana supply chain is still restricted within legalized
states' boundaries, it is useful to understand the chal-
lenges faced by supply centers.
ASHLAND, OREGON
Located sixteen miles north of the California bor-
der and at the southern end of the Rogue Valley,
the City of Ashland is home to Southern Oregon
University and just over 21,000 residents. Tour-
ists regularly visit Ashland to enjoy its cultural
and natural amenities, such as the Oregon Shake-
speare Festival and Lithia Park.
Located within Jackson County, the City of Ashland
also moved quickly in exercising its ability to enact local
commercial marijuana regulations. Many of Ashland's
regulations were proactively developed in anticipation
of Measure 91's passage to ensure the city was poised
to handle potential changes that might occur at the
state level.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 25
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Notably, Ashland addressed the ability to have a
local tax on the marijuana industry. Measure 91 was
expected to preempt local taxation of marijuana, limit-
ing this ability to the state, but Ashland and other cities
believed that local taxes would be grandfathered in if
adopted prior to Measure 91's effective date.11 The
council approved a 1O-percent tax on gross receipts
from marijuana sales in August 2014.
Even earlier, in April 2014, the Ashland City Council
approved a limited, temporary moratorium on the loca-
tion and operation of medical marijuana dispensaries.
State law already prohibited dispensaries from being
located in residential zones, and Ashland's additional
measure limited them from commercial/mixed use
areas and bought the city time-approximately one
year-to discuss potential longer-term regulations. ln
fact, the city lifted the moratorium just a few months
later in August and passed permanent zoning require-
ments as well as time, place, and manner restrictions
for dispensaries. Building on the state's buffering
provisions, these zoning requirements further restricted
dispensaries to strategic commercial/industrial loca-
Outdoor cannabis cultivation
tions in Ashland, required annual local permits, and
addressed hours of operation and odor control.
Like many municipalities, determining the appropri-
ate local regulations for marijuana dispensaries was
a high priority. Ashland also accounted for concerns
rega rdin g cu ltivation, parlicu larly i n residentia I a reas.
Medical marijuana had been legally grown in Ashland
for more than a decade, but recreational legalization
was expected to increase interest and uncertainty
around personal cultivation and provided an opportu-
nity to review past and potential nuisance issues. After
several months of meetings and gathering feedback
from residents, the city established a set of regulations
in January 2015 aimed at striking a balance between
what the state had by then authorized and concerns
raised by residents and staff. ln the end, both indoor
and outdoor cultivation were allowed in residential
zones with limitations.
Commercial cultivation has been more of a wild card,
as the city does not allow other forms of agriculture on
commercial or industrial land. ln its recommendations
to the city council, the Ashland Planning Commission
indicated concern about excessive use of electricity and
water and about the long-term supply of commercial or
industrial land versus job projections for this industry.12
The city elected to test the waters on commercial indoor
grow operations with a cap of 5,000 square feet, but
thus far it has not approved any local permits.
lmplementation
Voters in this progressive college town supported Mea-
sure 91 at a rate of 78 percent.l3
CITY OF ASHLAND
Popu lation l2Ot7) 2t,tt7
Land area (square miles): 6.59
Median Household lncome: $47,314
Source: United Stotes Census Bureou
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS25
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Though Ashland was not alone in adopting a local
tax scheme prior to Measure 91, the legality of these
early regulations proved unclear. However, 2015
amendments to state law clearly authorized Oregon
cities and counties to refer 3 percent of local taxes on
recreational marijuana sales to their voters. Ashland's
measure passed, and the council elected to dedicate
those proceeds to an affordable housing trust fund. A
guiding resolution directs mar'rjuana tax revenue of up
to $100,000 annually to the fund, though with the sig-
nificantly reduced tax rate the actual contributions thus
far have been modest. Ashland also receives a share of
the state's marijuana revenue, which is earmarked for
public safety expenses per state statute.
Ashland's regulations on residential cultivation
limited the number and placement of plants grown
outdoors. Recognizing that some would seek to supple-
ment or substitute with indoor cultivation, the land
use ordinance requires these activities to comply with
building codes, to confine light and glare, and to not
overtake residential structures as the primary use. As
a further, more readily enforceable layer of protection,
the city added a new residential tier to its municipal
electric utility rates. The $0.125 rate applies to resi-
dential customer use of more than 5,000 kWh/month,
effectively functioning as a penalty tier for extreme
usage. (While not part of the original discussion, this
measure also proved useful as Bitcoin mining grew in
popularity throughout the region.)14
Tourism is a significant driver of the local and
regional economy, and lnterim City ManagerAdam
Hanks believes anecdotal indications of the mar'rjuana
industry's impact have been positive. A local ban on
public smoking (tobacco-driven, but applicable to mari-
juana) in the downtown area curtails potential nuisance
issues, and enforcement has been fairly routine. Hanks
observed early signs of a niche market emphasizing a
"craft" product, similar to the beer and wine industries,
with tour operators designing regional experiences
showcasing the local value-added food, wine, and mari-
juana producers.
Key Observations
lnterim Manager Hanks feels Ashland was successful in
its proactive approach to authorizing a legal marijuana
industry within the city, and credits a collaborative
effort by finance, administration, legal, and especially
planning staff in navigating its approach.
lnterviewees:
Donny Jordon, County Administrotor, Jockson County
Adom Honks, lnterim City Monoger, Ashland
Endnotes
1 Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development,
'D LCD Farmland Protection Program.' https : //www. oreson.sov/
lcdlpages/f armprotprop.aspx
2 Oregon Department of Agriculture, "Land Use and Right
to Farm.' http://www.oreeon.eovlODA/PROGRAMS/
NATURALRESOURCES/Paees/LandUse.aspx
3 Neighboring Josephine Counfi did not disallow agriculture in
rural residential zoning, creating a problem where marijuana
farms started to open in rural neighborhoods. Josephine County
attempted to disallow agriculture in rural residential zoning,
and push the marijuana farms out, through an ordinance. This
attempt was overturned by court, because the county failed to
follow a procedure as the marijuana farms were grandfathered
in. Josephine County is now attempting to eliminate marijuana
farming within its jurisdiction through an injunction.
4 SouthernOregon.com, "Climate.' http://www.southernoregon.
com/southernoregoncli mate/
5 Sperling's Best Places, 'Medford, Oregon.' https://www.
bestplaces.net/climate/city/oreeon/medford
6 Medical marijuana is regulated by the Oregon Health Authority,
while recreational marijuana is regulated by the Oregon
Liquor Control Commission. This causes the regulations and
enforcement for both sectors to be inconsistent, regardless of
the similarities of the products.
7 Oregon Liquor Control Commission, "Recreational Marijuana.'
http: //www.oreeon.gov/olcc/mariiuana/Pages/def ault.aspx
8 Danny Jordan, lnterviewed by Laura Goddeeris and Will Fricke,
May 9, 2018
9 Marijuana Business Daily, 'Oregon marijuana oversupply driving
out small farmers, lowering pricesi April 18, 2018. https://
mibizdailv.com/oreqon-mariiuana-oversupplv-drivine-out-small-
f armers-lowering-prices/
10 Denton Record-Chronicle, 'Glut of marijuana in Oregon is
cautionary tale, experts say,' May 31, 2018. https://www.
dentonrc.com/aplRlut-of-mariiuana-in-oregon-is-cautionarv-
ta le-experts-say/a rticle 3328b7 ac-9 e7 5 - 5 5 ec- a 64 5 -
e792fdb6d 133.html
77 City of Ashland, 'Marijuana in Ashland: What's next?' https://
www.ashland.or.us/Page.asp?NavlD= 16515
72 City of Ashland, Council Communication, "Public Hearing on an
Ordinance Amending Title 18 Land Use of the Ashland Municipal
Code for Homegrown Marijuana and Marijuana-Related
Businesses," December 7, 2075. https://www.ashland.or.us/
S I B/f i Ies/ 1 2O1 1 5 Hemggroyln_l\r1a riiua na_a nd_Ma rii ua na
Businesses CC.pdf
13 Jackson County Clerk, 'Official Precinct Rpts 2-29
Amended,' November 24, 2074. http://iacksoncountyor.orel
DesktooModules/EasvDNNNews/DocumentDownload.ashx?oo
rtalid=9&moduleid=5094&articleid=202397&documentid= 197.
74 Shepherd, lGtie, "Bitcoin Miners Are Flocking to Oregon for
Cheap Electricity. Should We Give Them a Boost?" February 21,
2078. http://www.wweek.com/news/business/2018/02l21l
b itcoi n -m i ne rs-are-flockin g-to-o reson- for-c hea p-electricity-
sh ou ld -we-give-th em -a- boost /
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 27
Juneau is a rainy and temperate city, with its
population largely located along the banks of
the Gastineau Channel or in the Mendelhall
Valley. Over one million tourists arrive in Juneau
annually to visit the Mendenhall Glacier and
surrounding landscape.
The Alaskan legal landscape and popular opinion
regarding marijuana have fluctuated for over fofi
years. ln 1975, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled that
the personal use of a small amount of marijuana was
constitutionally protected by the Alaskan Constitu-
tion's right to privacy clause.l ln 1990, a passed ballot
initiative recriminalized marijuana in the state, a law
that was once again overturned by the courts, this time
the Alaska Court of Appeals, in 2003. Just three years
later, with Governor Frank Murkowski at the helm and
emboldened by a political environment emphasizing
"family values," the Alaska state legislature recriminal-
ized marijuana, this time as a misdemeanor punishable
by jail time.2
This law stood until the most recent marijuana ballot
measure passed in November 2014, allowing posses-
sion of up to an ounce of marijuana and legalizing the
commercial retail sale, manufacturing, testing, and
Population l2OtTlz 32,09 4
Land Area (square miles): 2701,.93
Median Household lncome: $87,436
Source: United Stotes Census Bureau
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS2A
CASE STUDY
Juneau, Alaska
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cultivation of marijuana products.3 This ballot initiative
is seen as an attempt to regulate marijuana in a similar
manner to alcohol. Juneau taxes retail marijuana at an
8-percent effective rate, with identical language and
effective tax rate for alcohol sales. According to an
analysis from Juneau's Mar'rjuana Committee, an
8-percent tax rate would mean anywhere from
$170,000 to $455,000 in revenue from the marijuana
sales tax per year.a
Juneau's motivation for allowing commercial mari-
juana businesses in the city was twofold. The simplest
reason is that voters wanted it. Officials also hold the
belief that being overly restrictive would encourage
black market sales.
After the 2014 ballot initiative was supported by
63 percent ofJuneau voters, the City and Borough
of Juneau immediately passed an eleven-month
moratorium period on marijuana businesses; this was
eventually extended to thirteen months to give time
for a marijuana committee made up of assembly and
planning commission members to work through the
pending issues.s ln this period, Juneau passed three
ordinances: amending its indoor smoking ban to include
marijuana, amending the "driving under the influence"
definition to include marijuana, and amending the land
use code to include regulations for mar'ljuana busi-
nesses. Following the moratorium, Juneau passed addi-
tional regulations regulating marijuana oil extractions,
allowing marijuana commercial business licenses, and
requiring ventilation systems that prevent odor from
being detected outside the premises.
One of the marijuana committee's key early deci-
sions was to not cap the total number of licenses,
effectively allowing the market to determine how many
marijuana businesses Juneau could support. With this
approach, it took about one year for the local market to
approach equilibrium.
The next decision made was zoning for retail, manu-
facturing, and testing. Commercial property in Juneau
is generally not in conflict with sensitive uses, leaving
those categories of commercial marijuana businesses
generally unrestrictive within commercial zoning. How-
ever, the governing body and community of Juneau
struggled with zoning on cultivation. Commercial culti-
vation is permitted in large-lot rural residential zoning
to supplement Juneau's limited industrial and commer-
cial property. Local leaders cited strong citizen support
of the state legalization measure in their decision.6
Despite fears of unintentionally zoning cultivation
C:nnabis product manufacturlng
out of the market by restricting it to only commercial
and industrial zones, all current cultivation businesses
are located in nonresidential zones by happenstance,
without complaints from residents. Many residents
feared an influx of crime surrounding new marijuana
businesses, something that did not materialize. Never-
theless, Juneau may ultimately restrict cultivation in the
residential zones in the future because of the evidence
that it would not be a burden on the industry.
All cultivation in Juneau is indoors. The state of
Alaska allows outdoor cultivation, though the climate
and terrain are often less than ideal for it. Wide open
spaces that are both suitable for large farms and far
enough from residential areas are nearly nonexistent
in Juneau. Outdoor or "sunlight" cultivators do exist in
the Fairbanks area of the state, where the terrain and
weather are far f riendlier to outdoor crops.T
Alaska's state guidelines do not provide guidance
on regulating onsite consumption of mar'rjuana prod-
ucts. Juneau does not allow onsite consumption in
an attempt to ensure its public smoking ban is not
undermined. However, the city will be watching for
state-level changes on the issue. ln the future, there
may be an opportunity to consider allowing sites with
cultivation or manufacturing and onsite tasting, similar
to many breweries and distilleries.
Early lssues
While Juneau does allow testing labs, none exist in
Juneau due to the difficulties of traveling to and from
the city. There are no roads that connect Juneau to the
outside world; all travel takes place through air and sea,
and all facets of marijuana in Juneau have some associ-
ated transportation issues. The retailers in Juneau all
grow their own products, but the most convenient test-
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 29
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ing facilities are in Anchorage, necessitating a ninety-
minute flight.
That flight caused some minor problems. Alaska
state troopers are under a directive to facilitate the
intrastate transportation of marijuana and to make sure
transporters follow the law. Early on and without direc-
tion from the state, Juneau local police were advising
commercial pilots at the municipally-run airport about
marijuana in their cargo as a professional courtesy,
believing that it was appropriate to advise the pilots of
the breach of federal transportation laws. The practice
was ended after police determined that the notifica-
tion was unnecessary and contradictory to the effort to
regulate marijuana similar to alcohol.
Another early, unintended consequence of introduc-
ing a legal mar'rjuana market was black-market sellers
targeting tourists who passed by the marijuana retail
storefronts after hours. Eventually, the problem was
dealt with by the retail business owners who witnessed
the problem on their security cameras, and the need for
local police involvement was and remains minimal. With
more urgent concerns related to opioids, methamphet-
amines, and heroin, enforcement of marijuana violations
by the state and local police takes a back seat to the
more serious drug use problems in Alaska.s Overall, the
local police work well with the marijuana businesses and
assist with maintaining successful best security practices,
treating commercial mar'tjuana like any other business.
Effects on Other lndustries
One of Juneau's biggest economic drivers is tourism,
with over one million cruise ship passengers visiting
Juneau in 2077 to take in the glaciers and picturesque
islands, as well as spend money at local businesses.e On
any given day, tourists outnumber residents in Juneau's
downtown area. An early concern was that some tour-
ists would take the marijuana they buy to the parks, in
violation of Juneau's public smoking ban. This concern
did not end up materializing, either due to education
about the public smoking ban or tourists being too
busy with excursions.
Juneau has a medium-sized cadre of indoor vegeta-
ble growers, who do not appear to be affected by the
mar'tjuana growers. Marijuana growers tend to be more
technology reliant and have more stringent security
requirements, causing the overlap in desired properties
and infrastructure to be minimal.
Key Observations
While Juneau proceeded with marijuana regulation pri-
marily to implement the will of the people and reduce
black market activity, several local economic develop-
ment opportunities have emerged. Transportation chal-
lenges and the accompanying limited market potential
have limited interest from nonresidents. As a result, the
industry has provided a Juneau-centric business oppor-
tunity for local residents.
Juneau's unique situation has also resulted in locally
anchored and vertically integrated supply chains. Local
retailers and concentrate producers, who also double as
cultivators, bring marijuana trim on their testing trips to
Anchorage. The trim is then sold to Anchorage edibles
manufacturers, of which there are none in Juneau, in
return for credit that the visiting business owners put
toward manufactured products to sell in Juneau.
lnterviewee:
Rorie Watt, City Monoger
Endnotes
1 Christopher lngraham, 'Alaska legalized weed 39 years ago. Wait,
what?'The Washington Post, September 24, 2014. https://www.
wash i nston post.com /n ews/won k/wp/20 14l09 /24la laska'
leealized-weed-39-vears-aeo-wait-what/?noredirect=on&utm
term= .7 22b3ae4O7 8c
2 Megan Edge and Laurel Andrews, 'Timeline: notable moments
in 40 years of Alaska's history with mar'rjuana,' Anchorage
Daily News, April 13, 2014 (updated September 28, 2076],.
https://www.adn.com/cannabis-north/article/alaska-weed-
histow/2074/04/14/
3 "Ballot Measure No. 2-13PSUM, An Act to Tax and Regulate the
Production, Sale, and Use of Marijuana.' http://www.elections.
alaska.sov/doc/bml/BM 2- 13 PSU M-ballot-lansuaee. pdf
4 City and Borough ofJuneau. 'Potential 8% Sales Tax on Marijuana
Retail Sales.' https://packet.cbiak.orslAttachmentViewer.ashx?At
tachmentlD= 531 5<emlD=2936
5 Office of the City Clerk, 'CBJ Responds to Statewide Marijuana
lnitiative.' https://www.iuneau.orslbeta transfer/clerk/ASC/
MARIJUANA/Mariiuana Committee.pho
6 The City and Borough of Juneau Assembly, 'Commercial
Cultivation of Marijuana in Residential Zones,' March 27,2016.
https://www.iuneau.orelbeta transfer/clerk/ASC/MARIJUANA/
documents/2076-O3-22-Commercial Cultivation of
Mariiuana in Residential Zones.pdf
7 "Fairbanks famer prepares to grow cannabis," Anchorage
Daily News, June L4,
watch?v=rniUhWbN a68
2016. https://www.voutube.com/
8 Rorie Watt, interviewed by Laura Goddeeris and Will Fricke, April
t6,20t8
9 Cruise Lines lnternationalAssociation, 'Cruise Msitor Outlook, ls
Regional Planning lmporta nt?" February t4, 2018. https : //www.
d ropbox. com /sh /ki 5 5 a 7e6qd pa 5eq /AABh DT8QhmCp3ck-
7 er;f f 6W Ca / F eb%2O 74".42O2O 78 / ) ohn%2OBinklev? dl = O &or evie
w=Southeast+Conference+Feb+2018+v+2-13- 18.pptx#
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS30
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CASE STUDY:
Kirkland, Washington
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Kirkland is a large Seattle suburb on the shores
of Lake Washington. lt is the home of a Google
campus, numerous beachfront activities, and
nearly 90,000 residents. ln 2010, Kirkland annexed
unincorporated areas of King County, increasing
its population by approximately 33,000.
ln Washington, recreational marijuana was put on
the ballot via initiative following an intense signature
collection period. lnitiative 502, which proposed to
legalize adult recreational use of marijuana, was among
a slate of hot-button issues and offices that drew 81
percent of the state's registered voters to the polls in
November 2072,with 55 percent voting "yes."1 ln King
County, where Seattle, Kirkland, and lssaquah are situ-
ated, 60 percent of voters supported the initiative.2
King County municipalities began to make deci-
sions on whether to allow cannabis businesses within
their borders during the thirteen-month statewide
moratorium imposed by lnitiative 502, which ended on
December 7,2073.3 The state allowed for municipalities
to "opt out" via an extended or permanent moratorium,
and many took the opportunity to enact such a ban. This
change forced the issue of cannabis sales and produc-
Population l20t7 Census Estimate):
88,630
Land Area (square miles): L7.82
Median Household lncome: $95,939
Source: United Stotes Census Bureau
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 31
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tion in Kirkland, and the city council quickly decided
against adopting a ban on commercial cannabis.
Community Concern
ln Kirkland, support for the legalization of marijuana
was even stronger than in the surrounding area, with
lnitiative 502 receiving a "yes" vote from 66 percent
of voters. lt also received bipartisan support from the
city council, stemming mostly from a desire to elimi-
nate unregulated black-market cannabis sales. The
city council and administration interpreted the wide
support from Kirkland voters for lnitiative 502 as a sign
to begin crafting new local regulations that would allow
commercial cannabis in the city. However, they quickly
learned that support for commercial cannabis in theory
does not always translate to support in practice.
City staff initially proposed to treat commercial can-
nabis like any other commercial business. This philoso-
phy was reflected in the first prospective zoning map
and regulations developed, which proposed to allow
cannabis production, processing, and retail businesses
to locate anywhere the existing zoning standards would
otherwise allow, save for the minimum buffers required
by the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board
and the state-imposed limit of four retail locations in
the city. This map was met with strong opposition to
prospective retail locations.
Chief among residents'concerns was the exposure
children and teenagers would have to cannabis through
legal storefronts. By treating cannabis retailers like
other commercial businesses, initial draft regulations
allowed for the prospect of having cannabis retail-
ers located near or interspersed within residential
areas. After listening to these concerns from residents,
Kirkland opted to create retail cannabis buffers along
designated school walk routes as well as near schools,
Iimiting children and teenagers from passing by the
businesses with regularity.a
The bans on commercial cannabis being imposed
in surrounding municipalities created additional fears
among some residents. They were afraid of becoming
a "destination" for cannabis, with thousands from the
surrounding municipalities coming to Kirkland solely to
make purchases, a fear that thus far has not material-
ized. Similarly, many communities have concerns about
a transient population arriving to set up shop in the
commercial cannabis industry. ln this case, those set-
ting up commercial cannabis businesses were already
residents of Kirkland and the surrounding area, includ-
ing two Google employees who founded a cannabis
retail shop as a side business.
"You connot overesttmate how much energy
ond concern there will be in the community over
legolized morijuono....There is o lot more passion
ond concern in the community thon we thought,
so we spent a lot of hme listening."
- Kurt Triplett
Like other municipalities, Kirkland residents showed
the highest interest in attending city council hearings in
recent memory during the debate period for legal com-
mercial cannabis. However, most were prevented from
speaking because of standard time limitations on public
comment during Kirkland City Council hearings.s As a
complement to the formal deliberation process, the city
manager's office, city council, and the planning direc-
tor made a dedicated effort to engage with community
members and talk through their concerns. A series of
incremental changes made to the local regulations con-
firmed that residents' input was being taken seriously
and helped to dissipate fears following implementation.
Public Safety
Perhaps the biggest issue as Kirkland debated com-
mercial cannabis was the fear of additional public safety
concerns created bythese businesses, including their
cash-based nature. Kirkland's police department reached
out to colleagues from similar-sized jurisdictions in Colo-
rado, where commercial cannabis had been up and run-
ning for over a year, to ask them for advice and evidence
regarding adverse public safety effects. Their colleagues
found that with common sense safety regulations, the
commercial cannabis businesses seemed to add no addi-
tional public safety issues to the area.
The general opinion of the Kirkland Police Depart-
ment (KPD) on commercial cannabis could be charac-
terized as "skeptical" at the beginning of the debate
period. Many rank-and-file officers were not supportive
of the move to legalize commercial cannabis in Kirk-
land, but the prospect of an effective mechanism to do
away with the local black market was attractive. When
commercial cannabis businesses became legal, the KPD
was instructed by the Kirkland administration to avoid
"de-policing" cannabis as whole and looking the other
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS32
Cannabis products for sale
way on all activity, rather than appropriately enforcing
control of the legal and illegal markets.
Current Landscape
The Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Control
Board's database includes eleven records of administra-
tive violations issued in Kirkland since 2015, most of
which are related to product traceability, packaging, or
advertising; two instances of sales to minors were cited.5
While public safety statistics since legalization have
not caused significant concern, the traffrc and parking
demands associated with retail cannabis businesses
have been slightly higher than the city anticipated.
Key Observations
Kirkland's work to legalize commercial cannabis
locally illustrates the challenges of translating theory
into practice.
Kirkland's residents, while supportive of legalizing
commercial cannabis at the ballot box, were hesitant
to embrace actual implementation of this new policy.
Other communities would be wise to anticipate time
for honest and open conversation with residents about
their expectations and what changes they are comfort-
able with. Kirkland feels that the effort from the plan-
ning director, manager's office, and council to engage
with and listen to community members outside regular
meetings went a long way to unpacking the cognitive
dissonance surrounding legal cannabis.
As the process continued, Kirkland continued to
modify regulations based on local feedback and condi-
tions. As a strategy to keep commercial retail cannabis
businesses "out of sight and out of mind" with respect
to children and teenagers, Kirkland opted to expand
the sensitive use buffers required by Washington to
include walk routes leading to its schools
City Manager Kurt Triplett feels that his community
benefited from the state-imposed, year-long morato-
rium. This process allowed Kirkland to have a lengthy
research and review process for developing its new
ordinances. Other app-era services, like Airbnb, have
caused disruption and confusion in some communities
without ample time to prepare for them. Washington
avoided this problem with commercial cannabis due to
the required moratorium following the November 2072
initiative. lndustry proponents may argue otherwise,
but evidence from Kirkland and other communities
suggests there are benefits in taking time to phase in
change, either through a self-imposed moratorium, trial
periods with sunset provisions, and/or other measures
ensuring regular monitoring and revisiting of how this
emergent industry functions in a community.
lnterviewee:
Ku rt Triplett, City M o no ge r
Endnotes
1 Office of the Secretary of State, "Gregoire and Reed certify 2012
election, including marriage and marijuana laws," December 5,
2072. https://www.sos.wa.gov/offrce/news-releases.aspx#/
news/1065
2 Olfice of the Secretary of State, 'November 06,2072 General
Election Results." November 27, 2072. https://results.vote.
wa.sov/results/2012 1 106/lnitiative-Measure-No-502-
Concerns-mariiuana BvCountv.html
3 State of Washington, 'lnitiative Measure No. 502,' filed July 8,
2011. httos://sos.wa.eov/ assets/elections/initiatives/i5O2.pdf
4 Raechel Dawson, 'Kirkland imposes new temporary marijuana
zoning regulations,' Kirkland Reporter, March 19, 2074. htto://
www.kirklandreporter.com/news/kirkland-imposes-new-
temporary-mariiuana-zoninE-repulations/
5 Only three speakers are permitted on each side of an issue; that
is, three may speak on the pro side of an issue and three may
speak on the anti side. To show their support in another way,
proponents of legal commercial cannabis distributed supportive
t-shirts to their supporters, causing the hearings to be the most
colorful in recent memory as well as the most popular.
6 Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board, "Molations
Dataset," June 27, 2078. https://data.lcb.wa.sov/dataset/
Violations- Dataset/dx3i-tzh 2
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 33
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Pacifica is a seaside San Francisco suburb of nearly
40,000 residents. Lying on the Pacific Ocean side
of San Mateo County, Pacifica is a popular suffing
and hiking destination.
Cannabis legalization had ovenarhelming support from
Pacifica residents as well as from the city council. The
council acted swiftly in March 2077 to begin the process
of allowing cannabis businesses in the city, holding a
joint study session with the Pacifica Planning Commis-
sion. This study session was followed by planning com-
mission and council meetings, which provided direction
regarding the authoring of the ordinances that would
allow commercial cannabis operations in Pacifica.
The ordinances, which were adopted in JulV 2077,
would be triggered by the passing of a local excise tax
on the gross receipts of cannabis sales. Seventy-nine
percent of voters voted in favor of the tax, enacting the
ordinances to allow legal cannabis operations.l
Pacifica decided to allow retail, manufacturing, and
testing businesses, but decided against allowing com-
mercial cultivation in the city. Unlike its neighbor to the
south, Half Moon Bay, Pacifica does not have green-
houses or agricultural business infrastructure. Outdoor
cultivation of any significant scale would have been
inconsistent with the suburban character of the city.
Population (2OL7lz 39,087
Land Area (square miles): 72.66
Median Household lncome: $103,545
Source: United States Census Bureou
CASE STUDY
Pacifica, California
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34 LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS
The Ordinances
Pacifica has two ordinances regulating cannabis opera-
tions. The first is a public safety ordinance, adminis-
tered by the Pacifica Police Department, which governs
the operation and licensing of cannabis businesses,
requires background checks of owners and employees,
and includes other safety requirements such as tech-
nological and physical security systems. lt also includes
provisions to curb nuisances such as loitering.
Pacifica's ordinances are stringent with respect to
nuisance effects, with applicants required to prove that
their business will not be a nuisance.
The second ordinance governs the cannabis zoning
regulations in Pacifica. The city created five overlay
districts for retail cannabis businesses: Fairmont, Linda
Mar, Park Pacifica, Rockaway Beach, and Sharp Park.
Each overlay district is limited to two retail businesses,
and in total no more than six retail businesses are
permitted in the city.2 Pacifica set these limitations due
to concerns about overconcentration, particularly in
economically depressed areas. Cannabis testing and
manufacturing businesses are not restricted to the
overlay districts; those businesses are allowed within
certain existing commercial zones. Pacifica also reduced
one of the state's default sensitive use setbacks, from
600 feet to 200 feet for day care centers, because that
setback was perceived as overly restrictive. Finally, the
ordinance clarified local regulations for personal cul-
tivation, including a prohibition on the use of artificial
light for plants grown outdoors.
Together, these ordinances created a four-phase
process for establishing cannabis businesses in Pacifica,
involving a license and land use entitlement:
7. Public safety license applications are submitted
to the police department for review.
2. Security plans are submitted to the police
department for review.
3. Use permit applications are submitted to the
planning department for review and public hear-
ing with the planning commission.
4. The police chief issues licenses after confirming
compliance with preceding steps.
Pacifica launched this process directly after the
enactment of the ordinances following the November
2017 election, when the local excise tax was passed.
The local tax, initially set at 6 percent of gross receipts
for the first two years, was projected by city staff to
generate $420,000 in the industry's first full year of
operation. Council retained the option to decrease or
increase the rate up to 10 percent after two years.3
Upon launch of the licensing process, the city received
over thirty applications for cannabis businesses.
Public Safety
While Pacifica has had illegal medical cannabis dispen-
saries operating since 2010, calls for service regarding
illegal cannabis were few. The illegal establishments
likewise were not a burden on law enforcement. How-
ever, those establishments did not report burglaries
and other crime on their proper$ due to the risk of
facing charges themselves. With legalization, the now-
legal businesses follow common sense safety regula-
tions while falling under the protection umbrella of the
Pacifi ca Police Department.
"Changes in culture statewide have caused o paro-
digm shift in the way cities and law enforcement are
opproachiry decisions regording cannobis busi-
nesses. Our community and council have expressed
their desire for this progrom to exist in Paciftco. lt is
our job to odminister the program in a way thot pro-
motes safety and fosters a positive and collaborative
relotronship with cannabis business owners."
- Dan Steidle
Key Observations
The city reached out for assistance and examples of how
to regulate its cannabis industry. lt looked to large cities
in the area such as San Francisco, Berkeley, and Oakland,
but the beach town nature and lack of a large commer-
cial sector in Pacifica made comparisons difficult. A more
beneficial route was working with experienced consul-
tants on the business aspects of regulations.
lnterviewees:
Lorenzo Hines, Assisto nt City Manager, Tino Wehrmeister,
Planning Director, Dan Steidle, Chief of Police
Endnotes
1 County of San Mateo, Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder &
Elections, "November 7, 2077 Consolidated Municipal, School,
and Special District Election." https://www.smcacre.orslpost/
november-7-2017-0
2 Municipal Code, Article 17.5 'MO Mar'rjuana Operation
Overlay District.' https://librarv.municode.com/calpacifi cal
codes/code oj_qrd i nances?nodeld=TIT9PLZO CH 4ZO
ARTlT.5MOMAOPOVDI S9.4. 1753OVDICR
3 Municipal Code, Article 17.5, Sec. 9-4.7753,'Overlay districts
created.' http://www.cityofpacifrca.orelcivicax/filebank/
blobdload.aspx?Blobl D= 129Q1
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 35
Santa Rosa, California
CASE STUDY:
--t 'l
IIIIII
Santa Rosa is the largest city in Sonoma County
and California's Wine Country. The city is known
for its diversity, with a large Mexican-American
and LGBT community. ln October 2Ot7, severe
wildfires destroyed thousands of homes in
Santa Rosa.
History/Background
Medical cannabis dispensaries have been allowed in
Santa Rosa since 2005, but otheraspects ofthe cannabis
industry were only authorized in early 2016. Prior to the
passage of Proposition 64in California, the Santa Rosa
City Council authorized the licensing of medical cannabis
cultivation, manufacturing, testing, and distribution.
Santa Rosa was ahead of the curve with respect to
California municipalities, making it clear after the pas-
sage of Proposition 64 that it wanted to broadly allow
commercial cannabis businesses. City officials recog-
nized the cannabis industry was already operating in
Santa Rosa, both through black market activity and the
"gray market" state-sanctioned medical dispensaries
that operated without local input. ln legitimizing the
industry, the Santa Rosa City Council and administra-
tion saw an opportunity to ensure compliance with
Population l20t7l: t7 5,269
Land Area (square miles): 51.29
Median Household Income: $62,705
Source: United States Census Bureau
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS36
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a
"lt wos important to have a clear directron
from the council on whot the approach was
going to be."
- Sean McGlynn
permitting, planning, and public safety standards and
to create a revenue stream for the city. The city also
reasoned that any part of the industry not officially
permitted would continue to operate in Santa Rosa
without regard for negative externalities, hence their
decision to allow all elements of the supply chain from
cultivation through retail sales.
Process and Regulations
"Bring certainty to a very uncertain landscape" was a
driving philosophy in Santa Rosa's efforts to carefully
and thoughtfully regulate the commercial cannabis
industry. The city council-leaning on its background in
public safety-prioritized developing a path to compli-
ance and building trust between the community and
the industry.
"The motrvohon was to get more people to
be compliont so that they could be legihmate.
We could tox it, and actuolly make it part of
our community."
- Clare Hartman
City staff and the City Council's Cannabis Policy
Subcommittee members were tasked with learning all
they could about the cannabis industry and its poten-
tial effects on infrastructure, health, services, and
more. Setting up an interdepartmental work team, staff
reached out to their counterparts in other communities
in Colorado, Oregon, and Washington with experience
in regulating cannabis. But as an early community to
opt-in on legal cannabis, Clare Hartman, Santa Rosa's
deputy director - planning, acknowledged that "we
were building the program as it was happening to us."
Over the course of two years, Santa Rosa admin-
istrative and planning staff took time to attend com-
munity and neighborhood meetings in order to address
concerns over specific land use permitting for cannabis
businesses. The presence of former Santa Rosa Police
Chief Tom Schwedhelm and Cannabis Policy Subcom-
mittee member Ernesto Olivares, a former Santa Rosa
police lieutenant, likely helped some residents feel
more comfortable that the public safety aspect of can-
nabis businesses was being considered. Council took
-
Cannabis oil
up the issue at more than twenty full or subcommittee
meetings and implemented a series of interim regula-
tions before finally passing a comprehensive ordinance
in early 2018. When it finally came up for public hear-
ing, the pressing issues had been thoroughly discussed
between residents and administrators, leading to an
undramatic and anti-climactic vote.
Santa Rosa favored a transparent approach and
decided against administratively approved permits for
most cannabis businesses. lnstead, it opted to issue use
permits through a process requiring public notices and,
in many cases, public hearings and action by the plan-
ning commission. lt allows cannabis businesses to be
located in the same areas as their non-cannabis coun-
terparts. Recognizing additional concerns associated
with cannabis, including those gathered from public
outreach, the city was proactive in layering additional
regulations related to security protections, standards to
prevent odor, and sensitive use setbacks. While public
interest has been piqued by businesses proposed in
close proximity to residential areas, these regulations
have generally provided sufficient assurances to neigh-
borhoods' nuisance concerns.
Growing a Compliant lndustry
Thus far, Santa Rosa has approved over forty land use
permits for cannabis cultivation (indoor only, including
greenhouses), manufacturing, testing, distribution, and
medical retail businesses. Commercial retail applica-
tions were accepted in April 2018 and will proceed
through the evaluation and conditional use permit
process through the rest of the year. There is no explicit
limit on the number of cannabis business licenses,
though 500-foot setback requirements for cannabis
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 37
t-'-tQ
N
H Ii
retail businesses to prevent over-concentration and
buffer sensitive uses implicitly cap that sector.l
Many manufacturers of cannabis products were
already operating in Santa Rosa when the city began
creating its cannabis land use regulations and licensing
the industry. The pre-existing businesses were often
not operating in appropriate areas, such as in resi-
dences or in residential zones. Many have since found
legitimate and licensed locations, and some existing
businesses partnered to share the cost of moving and
licensing. Providing a path to compliance has also
enabled the city to learn more about the industry's
operators, which notably include a share of single,
female head-of-households.
Absent an explicit cap, the market for appropri-
ate commercial and industrial land has proved to be a
challenge for cannabis businesses in Santa Rosa, which
compete against each other as well as with comple-
mentary boutique tourism industries such as brewer-
ies and wineries. lndustrial land vacancy rates have
dropped f rom 72.2 percent in 2074 to 4.5 percent in
2077.2 But Santa Rosa is wary of letting cannabis busi-
nesses dominate its economy, as the region is in the
process of rebuilding from the recent wildfires, and the
city wants to ensure space for contractors and specialty
trades, among many other industries. The city con-
venes an interdepartmental follow-through program to
monitor the cannabis industry's growth and consider
potential interventions in response to local effects or
modifications to the state law.
Though Santa Rosa regulations intentionally direct
commercial cannabis businesses away from residen-
tial land, the abundance of cannabis cultivation in
the region is causing problems for law enforcement.
Between February and May 2018, multiple home inva-
sions took place in Sonoma County, including two in
Santa Rosa. These crimes target private residences that
legally grow cannabis for personal use, which are not
required to follow the strict security regulations that
licensed cannabis businesses abide by. Law enforce-
ment believes the illegality of cannabis on the east
coast and the resulting high street value is at the root
of the problem.s
Key Observations
Santa Rosa believes that its permissive early approach
was the correct one. Observations of other 1'urisdictions
showed that a piecemeal approach, prohibiting certain
sectors of the cannabis industry while allowing others,
was ineffective in quelling the problem of black market
businesses. Preferring to allow the industry to operate
and regulate it led the city to permit indoor/greenhouse
cultivation despite limited presence of any other agri-
cultural activity within city limits.
Staff credit the council for its clear direction regard-
ing a path to compliance, which provided the motiva-
tion and resources necessary to coordinate across
diverse stakeholders, including an industry not accus-
tomed to working with government. This process
opened up opportunities to build trust and navigate
ambiguity around public safety and code enforcement.
Other communities in the region have followed suit.
Cloverdale, Cotati, and Sebastopol, incorporated cities
with populations of 8,618, 7 ,255, and 7 ,379, respec-
tively, decided to allow commercial cannabis activities
such as cultivation and manufacturing after observing
Santa Rosa and having conversations with Santa Rosa
planning staff; like Santa Rosa, these communities have
the intention of benefiting through regulatory control
of commercial cannabis and associated tax revenue.
lnterviewees:
Sean McGlynn, City Monoger
Clore Hortmon, Deputy Director - Plonning
Endnotes
1 City of Santa Rosa, 'Cannabis FAQ's: Distance to School.' https://
srcity.orslDocumentCenter/View/ 1873 1/Distance-to-school
2 City of Santa Rosa Planning & Economic Development, "Cannabis
Permitting Update," January 12, 2078. https://srcity.orsl
DocumentCenter/View/187 14l2018-01- 12-Cannabis- Permit-
Activity-Update
3 "Sonoma sees spate of marijuana-related home invasions,'
The Mercury News, May 4, 2078. https://www.mercurvnews.
com / 2078 / 05 /04/sononoa-county-sees-spa
related-home-invasions/
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS38
About the Authors
Laura Goddeeris, AICB oversees ICMAs applied research on local government practices, programs, partnerships,
and policies as Director of Survey Research. Prior to joining ICMA, she gained over a decade of experience in
research, outreach, and program administration around issues of community and economic development, local and
regional food systems, and transportation science. While based in Michigan, she also worked closely with municipal
staff for years as chair of her local planning commission and community development advisory committee. Laura
holds a Master's in Urban Planning and Policy from the University of lllinois at Chicago.
Will Fricke is member of ICMAs Research and Policy Team, carrying out research projects and survey research. His
work covers a wide array of topics such as service delivery, land use, and form of government. Will is a graduate of
the University of Connecticut.
LOCAL IMPACTS OF COMMERCIAL CANNABIS 39
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IOMA
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