Fines for cannabis grow operations and illegal dispensaries in unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County — including Lake Los Angeles, Littlerock, and Quartz Hill — will soon be set at up to $30,000 per day, based on a vote by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday.
The board voted unanimously to introduce an ordinance that includes the new penalties. Another vote will be required to formally adopt the ordinance, but that is largely an administrative matter.
Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Sheila Kuehl co-authored the motion recommending the new ordinance, which Barger had championed in order to crack down on massive grow operations in the Antelope Valley. Those operations have diminished and contaminated water supplies with dangerous chemicals, posed public safety threats to neighbors and increased the risk of wildfires, Barger said.
“Illegal grows, though, are not just occurring in the open spaces of the Antelope Valley. Homes are being gutted and converted to indoor grows to grow hundreds of plants,” Barger said. “This motion is not about making cannabis illegal. This motion is about protecting the consumer and the community against the unforeseen impact of illegal cannabis cultivation.”
Kuehl said she was in full agreement.
“Large-scale illegal cannabis operations cause huge public safety and environmental safety concerns,” Kuehl said. “It includes water theft, damage to our fire hydrants, just stealing water to make this happen. This water is a great loss to our communities that are imminently threatened by wildfires.”
Months ago, Barger had sought criminal penalties but encountered resistance among her colleagues, who found the plan out of sync with the county’s criminal justice reforms. The county has long worked at cracking down on unauthorized dispensaries but have compared the process to a game of “whac-a-mole” in which one dispensary is knocked down only to see another open up elsewhere.
While dispensaries are illegal in unincorporated areas, those communities sometimes abut areas where legal dispensaries operate freely, sometimes two to a block.
In July, at the urging of Supervisor Janice Hahn, the board voted to reconsider its broad ban on the cultivation, manufacture, testing and distribution of the drug for anything other than personal use. Hahn said Tuesday that a county work group charged with making a new set of recommendations for legal cannabis retail growth, regulation and enforcement had completed its work in December.
“I do know that providing a legal pathway for people to grow, produce, sell cannabis can help in some way to tackle the illegal market,” Hahn said. “Hopefully, we’re going to be voting soon on the idea of legally providing options for cannabis businesses in unincorporated county (areas).”
California voted to legalize the recreational use of cannabis in 2016 and legal recreational sales began in January 2018. In October 2017, a county work group generated a report including dozens of recommendations on how to regulate cannabis retailing, production and distribution.
Hahn was originally among those who shelved that report and chose to keep the ban in place. Tuesday, she noted that lifting the ban could potentially be a source of tax revenue.
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Viva California says
Sounds like decisions are being made based on logic and common sense in the High Desert of LA County; at least as far as illegal grows are concerned. The same can not be said north of Ave A where former LA County lawbreakers will migrate to, and where they will be offered asylum. Do neighboring counties communicate? Do they share information and strategies. The penal code is the same statewide. Dear LA County, help your neighbor, Southeast Kern, for she has become the official dump of the great Antelope Valley. Rosamond has always been a small, quirky little border town of LA County; it’s just grown exponentially nastier over the past few years and deserves better protection since I believe it’s still a part of the world’s “5th largest economy”. Where’s all that money going? If quality of life keeps being defined by immature, frightened politicians, no one will benefit from anything positive but the freakin crook. Pull your head out Kern.
FWB says
BEING FINED AND COLLECTING THE FINE IS ENTIRELY TWO DIFFERENT THINGS
ACE says
HEY LA COUNTY SUPERVISOR BARGER –
HOW’S YOUR INVESTIGATION INTO THE CANDIDA FUNGUS SICKENING YOUR SENIORS AND THE DISABLED WHO COUNT ON HOME DELIVERED MEALS..?
A FUNGUS THAT CAUSES YEASTY BURPS AND DIARRHEA…
SENIORS STUCK IN THEIR HOMES DUE TO THEIR DISABILITIES, INCLUDING THE BLIND…
NEED YOUR ASSURANCES THAT THE MEALS ARE SAFE AND WHOLESOME…
NOT CONTAMINATED BY SOME LOW WAGE WORKER SCRATCHING THEIR
FROTHY-CHEESY-YEASTY STINKY UNWASHED VAGINA’S…
AND EITHER UNKNOWINGLY OR PURPOSELY FOULING THE ENTREES..?
***
HAVE ANY OF OUR SUPERVISOR DINED ON ANY OF THE MEALS LATELY OR EVER..?
WOULD YOU DARE TO EAT THEM NOW..?
***
HAVE THE SENIORS AND DISABLED THAT HAVE BEEN EATING THESE FROZEN INFECTED PREPARED MEALS BEEN INFORMED AND WARNED..?
SO THEY CAN TELL THEIR DOCTORS..?
I DOUBT IT…
***
HOW ABOUT YOU FOLKS..?
YOU KNOW ANY SENIORS EATING THIS YUCKY STUFF..?
YOU SHOULD WARN THEM…
No more plants says
No one can understand how scary and dangerous these illegal grow operations are till it’s in their backyard. I live in Littlerock and these grow operations are doing more damage than good, they steal the water that the rest of us have to pay for at a higher price because of their theft, the trash they create is all over the desert, it has become dangerous to go horseback riding because of the fear of getting shot and that was one of the things that brought me here to Littlerock in 2003. Then the air out here smells so bad from the plants its sometimes embarrassing when we have company over.
Cynic says
“Months ago, Barger had sought criminal penalties but encountered resistance among her colleagues, who found the plan out of sync with the county’s criminal justice reforms”
How ridiculous.