West Sacramento may join a string of cities across the region in
at least temporarily banning outdoor plantings of medicinal marijuana.
A
decision on a proposed 45-day moratorium could come at the City
Council’s meeting today following a public hearing on the issue starting
at 7 p.m. at West Sacramento City Hall, 1110 W. Capitol Ave.
The proposed ban could be extended for as long as two years.
If the moratorium is adopted at the meeting, it goes into effect
immediately and runs to Jan. 19. Primary caregivers and their patients
would still be able to grow cannabis under a roof if the temporary ban
goes into effect, said city officials.
If council members do not
adopt the moratorium, city staff will return in the spring with draft
regulations for city leaders to consider.
West Sacramento
officials last year passed a ban on outdoor cultivation associated with
marijuana dispensaries, but left alone provisions on growing for
personal medical use.
But city staffers say they have since become aware of rising burglaries and thefts of marijuana plants that they say are connected to cultivation.
That and the nuisance the plants’ strong odor creates in the city’s neighborhoods led to the push for a temporary ban.
Staff members cite police statistics that show a dramatic rise in marijuana-related complaints.
West Sacramento police have received 112 such complaints to date this year, department statistics show.
That’s
more than twice the 60 complaints filed last year, nearly as many as
during the previous four years combined and 43 percent of all narcotics
complaints filed so far this year.
"It seems to be more
prevalent," said Charline Hamilton, the city’s community development
director. "Plants are stolen. Homes are burglarized. Each year, it’s
getting worse."
But medical marijuana advocates say moving
cultivation indoors would be too costly for patients who would have to
rely on hydroponics and other equipment and that cities are too hasty in
imposing outdoor growing bans.
"By forcing (growing) inside, it
can be prohibitive for many patients. We believe patients need the
option to grow outdoors," said Kris Hermes, a spokesman for Oakland-based medical cannabis advocate Americans for Safe Access.
Hermes added that cities’ bans are a "knee-jerk reaction to complaints received from people in the community."
"They’re using a blunt instrument to make the lives of thousands of people more complicated," Hermes said.
West Sacramento is just the latest city in the greater Sacramento region to look at outdoor cultivation of medical marijuana.
Sacramento
leaders enacted a ban last month that went into effect Nov. 20.
Roseville imposed a ban Nov. 1. Elk Grove banned outdoor growing in
April, and Lodi considered a similar ban in October.





