Register ICMag Forum Menu Features
You are viewing our:
in:
Forums > Talk About It! > Cannabis Laws & Cannabis Legislation > county limiting commercial/medical cultivations

Thread Title Search
Buy Cannabis Seeds at Royal Queen Seeds
Post Reply
county limiting commercial/medical cultivations Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 09-15-2017, 11:49 PM #1
eatingglue
Newbie

Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Slo County
Posts: 6
eatingglue is on a distinguished road
county limiting commercial/medical cultivations

Hey icmag forum, I live in SLO County, CA (San Luis Obispo). I go to almost all of my counties meetings pertaining to the counties cannabis draft regulation so I believe I'm fairly current with whats going on. I try to keep up on state and gov. to. Most of the stuff that I don't understand I'm able to look up and find out if its good, bad or neutral. Except some of the board members want to limit the amount of commercial/med cultivation sites. They came up with this idea after they heard Monterey County (the neighboring county to the north) was considering it. Monterey County has since dropped the cultivation limit. My question is is this legal for them to do? There has been random people during public comment get up and say it's not legal for them to do until yesterdays meeting an attorney spoke during public comment and told them it was not legal. I've searched online and can't find any information on this. I'm hoping one or several of you may know.
eatingglue is offline Quote


2 members found this post helpful.
Old 09-15-2017, 11:53 PM #2
eatingglue
Newbie

Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Slo County
Posts: 6
eatingglue is on a distinguished road
Oh yes, I'm not really new to this forum, I did create a login last month but have been creeping around on here for years. I never needed to ask a question because it was usually already answered several times. I just had to search. Thanks in advance for any info you have on my counties situation!
eatingglue is offline Quote


Old 09-16-2017, 03:03 PM #3
MJPassion
Observer

MJPassion's Avatar

Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: uni-verse
Posts: 5,584
MJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant futureMJPassion has a brilliant future
Ask that lawyer that told them they would be in violation of the law.

He'll be the one w the where with all to shut that piece of local legislation down.
MJPassion is offline Quote


Old 09-19-2017, 05:44 AM #4
eatingglue
Newbie

Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Slo County
Posts: 6
eatingglue is on a distinguished road
Thanks MJPassion, good idea. I don't recall the guys name. I went to the county site and they have not posted the video yet and nobody I know who was there recalls who he was either.
eatingglue is offline Quote


Old 09-24-2017, 03:36 PM #5
St. Phatty
Senior Member

Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,377
St. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant futureSt. Phatty has a brilliant future
Question

I thought this was covered in the Declaration of Independence.

"Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness".

That includes making a living and growing medically useful plants.


I see counties using Agricultural laws & zoning to try & control rural grows. County commisioners make rules, e.g. regarding setbacks (distance from edge of land parcel.) If the setback is 100 feet, that screws people on city lots, which are often 50 feet wide.

It's very Giving of you to go to all those meetings. 2 Thumbs up !


SLO county may very well try to hide the real law. They can allow unlimited plants, but if setbacks are 300 feet (which I have read in records of some county meetings), that screws a lot of growers on smaller lots.

Basically favoring big business.

EQUAL TREATMENT UNDER THE LAW. <== I wonder about mentioning that. If they are creating zoning rules that favor land-owners with 50+ acres, that certainly doesn't help the 'little guy'.
St. Phatty is online now Quote


2 members found this post helpful.

Post Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 03:20 PM.


Click to visit Twilight Labs


This site is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
You must be of legal age to view ICmag and participate here.
All postings are the responsibility of their authors.
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2018, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.