November ballot item would allow up to four retail sales facilities, cannabis cultivation and product manufacturing
A divided Encinitas City Council declined to take a position Wednesday, June 17, on a citizens’ initiative on the November ballot that would allow cannabis cultivation, product manufacturing, and up to four retail sales dispensaries.
After extended debate, the council agreed in a 4-0 vote to ask the San Dieguito Alliance for Drug-Free Youth to write an opposition statement for the Nov. 3 ballot, but the council as a whole will not sign that statement.
“It’s clear that a couple of us are willing to come out in opposition to this measure and a couple of us aren’t,” Councilman Tony Kranz said before the vote, adding, “I’m going to oppose this measure if anybody asks me about it.”
Councilwoman Kellie Shay Hinze also said she had reservations about the initiative and might sign an opposition statement. Mayor Catherine Blakespear and Councilman Joe Mosca both said they would not endorse it, saying they thought the city should stay neutral and let the voters decide. Councilwoman Jody Hubbard was absent from the meeting.
The Cannabis Activity Zoning Ordinance initiative has been waiting for two years to go before the city’s voters. It was certified as ballot-ready in August 2018, just days after the submission deadline for that year’s November general election ballot, so it will appear on this year’s ballot.
If approved by a majority of the city’s voters, the initiative will:
- Allow up to four cannabis retail sales business to open in town;
- Permit cannabis cultivation in greenhouses in the city’s agricultural zones;
- Allow cannabis product manufacturing in business parks, light industrial and agricultural zones;
- Permit what’s termed “cannabis kitchens” to operate in general commercial, business park and light industrial zones;
- Allow cannabis distribution sites in business park and light industrial zones.
Kranz said Wednesday, June 17, that he was once a “stoner” himself many years ago and “didn’t hold it against” people if they wanted to use marijuana, but said he opposed the initiative because it would allow cannabis retail dispensary stores to open in Encinitas.
“I have not heard a whole lot of clammering for dispensaries in Encinitas,” he said, noting that in 2014 the city’s voters turned down an initiative that would have allowed dispensaries.
Kranz added that while he opposed the retail sales portion of the initiative, he supported the section that would allow cultivation of commercial cannabis in greenhouses in the city’s agricultural zones.
Published: June 19, 2020
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