POSTED: 8:34 pm PDT May 27, 2008
UPDATED: 12:15 am PDT May 28, 2008
UKIAH, Calif. -- Mendocino County voters are facing yet another showdown over marijuana. Measure B on next week's ballot would repeal large parts of an earlier voter-approved initiative that legalized small-scale marijuana growing.
While medical marijuana users say Mendocino's current law is humane, those supporting Measure B say pot cultivation is growing out of control.Mendocino County is known for its rugged natural beauty, lush redwood forests, rolling hills. But it is also known for widespread marijuana cultivation.
There is no debating the prevalence of marijuana in Mendocino County, but the debate on just how much folks can actually grow in the region is growing. This battle began back in 2000, when county voters approved Measure G which allowed individuals to have up to 25 pot plants for recreational and medicinal use.
Measure B on the June third ballot would essentially repeal Measure G. Under it anyone in Mendocino County caught growing pot without a medical marijuana prescription would be breaking the law. And, to conform with state law, the plant limit would drop from 25 to six.
Laura Hamburg is a former marijuana grower and a strong opponent of Measure B. She says marijuana is medicine and authorities should not interfere. "I am proud to have been growing organic marijuana for my mother who was bald as a baby going through chemotherapy and stage four cancer," says Hamburg.
Hamburg says if Measure B is approved it could force medical marijuana patients into the criminal market. She also says it would divert police resources to busting small family growers. "That small-time, law-abiding citizen will now be lining up with their hands behind their back ready to be arrested," claims Hamburg.
Ross Liberty is chairman of the Yes On B campaign and owner of a car parts factory in Ukiah.
Liberty says he's tired of seeing commercial pot growers come into his county, get rich and not pay taxes, while using the medical marijuana law as a cover.
"We have become the epicenter for marijuana cultivation in the country. A lot of bad apples have come into the county. You know, they don't grow marijuana despite the fact it's illegal; they grow marijuana because it's illegal," says Liberty.
17-year-old Marcos Arreguyn says he trims marijuana plants for growers. Why? He says it's hard to turn down $20-an-hour, a figure that's double what he makes sweeping a factory floor."Yeah, it's all about the money," says Arreguyn.74-year-old George Hanamoto sees the issue in his own way. He grows marijuana at home to help with his glaucoma and arthritis. "I have a lot of different ailments that it helps them all. I can't afford to buy it, so I have to grow my own," explains Hanamoto. "I think there are a lot of commercial growers who grow hundreds and hundreds of plants they don't even touch out there. They grow out there in the boonies; that's who they should go after, not us."
Right now, federal law does not recognize state and county marijuana ordinances.
Even so this hotly contested issue will be played out on June 3rd.
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