ARCATA, Calif. (AP) - Happily isolated on
California's remote Humboldt County coast, Arcata has long made room in
its heart for marijuana, whether grown illegally in the back woods by
refugees of the Summer of Love, or legally in the back rooms of homes by
medical pot patients.
But the mellow days are
coming to an end. Even Arcata residents who support legalization of
marijuana have become fed up with high-volume indoor growing operations
that take over much-needed housing and take advantage of the state's
loosely written medical marijuana law.
The neighbors of these
clandestine pot farms - operated behind curtains, shutters and alarm
systems - complain of the skunk-like stink of cannabis, fire hazards,
rising rents, vicious guard dogs, caches of guns, illegal pesticides,
roadside dumping of unwanted growing gear, and late-night visits from
shady characters.
Rather than throw more cops
at the problem, the City Council is fighting back in a way befitting
this liberal outpost that would rather be known for its pioneering
community forest and sewage treatment marsh than marijuana.
Measure I on next week's
ballot would impose a 45 percent electricity tax on households - with
medical and other exceptions - that use three times the amount of power a
typical family home does. The measure takes aim at commercial growers
who maximize production by packing homes full of high intensity lights
and irrigation systems that gobble electricity and sometimes cause fires
from overloaded circuits.
"Our hope is to drive the
large-scale growing operations out of town," said Shane Brinton, a city
councilman and vice mayor who has pushed the novel idea.
"I don't view it as
anti-marijuana," said Brinton. "It's a land-use issue, a public safety
issue, and environmental issue as well."
If it passes, it would be
the first measure of its kind in the nation aimed at marijuana growers,
said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
The amount of electricity
that would subject a resident to the tax amounts to a $700 per month
bill, and is equivalent to the power used by a big chain drug store.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. reports that 633 homes - one in 15- are
using that much juice, indicating they are raising pot rather than
families.
If that many growers decide
to absorb the tax instead of getting out of town, the tax would
generate $1.2 million, or nearly 4 percent of the city's $31.7 million
budget.
Located on the rainy coast
280 miles north of San Francisco, Arcata is a city of 17,000 that dates
to the days when mule trains carried goods from the shipping port to the
Gold Rush Country. The lumber and fishing industry here have fallen on
hard times, but Humboldt State University is a foundation of the local
economy, with contributions from niche manufacturers of gourmet cookies,
kayaking gear and goat cheese.
Since the back-to-the-land
movement of the 1970s, marijuana has been creeping into the culture and
economy, and now permeates it, said Tony Silvaggio, a Humboldt State
sociologist and a founder of the Humboldt Institute of Interdisciplinary
Marijuana Research.
"This is the center of
marijuana culture in the universe," he said. "One of the reasons is we
have a very tolerant attitude toward marijuana. Word gets around, and
people come here with the sole purpose to grow marijuana indoors..."
Unlike some other states'
medical marijuana laws, California's Compassionate Use Act of 1996 sets
no limits on plants or processed marijuana, does not prohibit the sale
of excess medical marijuana to other patients or dispensaries, does not
require patients or growers to register, and does not lay out which
diseases or conditions can be treated with marijuana. When growers get
busted, they often claim they are growing for patients.
Based on interviews with
hundreds of growers, Silvaggio said even medical marijuana growers
usually sell their extra, so the two markets cannot be separated. "Part
of the problem with the marijuana economy is it is unregulatable," he
said.
Several years ago, people
here began realizing that whole blocks of houses had been taken over by
illegal growers, said Kevin Hoover, editor of the irreverent weekly
newspaper The Arcata Eye.
"We came to realize we
weren't really dealing with hippies and the Zig Zag man. It was this
industry," said Hoover. "More than the dangers, it was this loss of
neighborhood community. You can't have your neighbor take in the paper
when you're on vacation. You can't borrow a cup of sugar."
To get their neighborhoods back, more and more people are informing on their neighbors, said Police Chief Tom Chapman.
Police are making progress, but still hardly making a dent.
In 2010 Arcata police
served search warrants on six houses and in 2011 that rose to 14. So far
this year, police investigated 48 houses, and got warrants to search
17. But only nine produced enough evidence for criminal prosecution.
Police had to buy two huge shipping containers to haul off growing
equipment.
Driving an unmarked SUV
with his guitar in the back seat - he plays in a classic rock band -
Chapman points out house after house. One bust produced 750 plants and
13 pounds of processed marijuana. Another was a half block from a grassy
playground where kids and dogs romped.
"This is Small Town USA,"
he said. "The people who live here are a bunch of working folks, salt of
the earth, people just trying to get by."
A typical grower, the chief
said, is a 20- or 30-something from outside the area, who has moved
into a house with an absentee landlord. They pay their rent on time with
cash that stinks of marijuana.
"Most of the landlords claim ignorance," he said.
Marnin Robbins has seen a half-dozen houses in his neighborhood raided by police.
"I don't have a problem
with marijuana," he said. "But I do have a problem with people turning
their houses into factories and bringing a violent element into our
neighborhood."
Measure I has no organized
opposition. But Mark Sailors, who drives a pedal cab downtown and grows
medical marijuana for himself, his wife and his mother, has long felt
city attempts to control medicinal cannabis are hypocritical.
"This is just another in a
long line of what I call Arcata's medical marijuana Jim Crow laws,"
Sailors said. "They pay a lot of lip service to being pro-Compassionate
Use Act. But all their actions are trying to limit people and discourage
the use" of medical marijuana.