The Santa Barbara City Council appears more receptive to marijuana than ever before. Quelling the fears of the few from the cannabis industry at City Hall, councilmembers moved forward with regulating recreational marijuana within city limits. Officials are far from detailing permissible weed operations from “seed to sale,” but there was discussion of expanding dispensaries beyond the three locations currently allowed in the city.
On Tuesday, city staff laid out the first steps of a regulatory framework. The city must establish its own policies; otherwise, state laws will supersede local control in early 2018. This urgency was not lost on councilmembers, who voted to send the draft proposal to the Ordinance Committee.
Perhaps expressing the most reservations was Councilmember Randy Rowse. He warned against the industry wooing policymakers with tax dollars. In Colorado and Washington, he argued, the revenues were not as fruitful as anticipated. What’s more, enforcement costs ate up much of the funds generated. “I’m not ready to be too cavalier about this,” he said, noting Attorney General Jeff Sessions is “very different” than Obama’s AG, Eric Holder, who was at the helm when the feds threatened to seize the assets of dispensaries in the City of Santa Barbara in 2009.