Point Arena, California
President Obama was very eager to dismiss legalizing marijuana as a strategy in stimulating job growth. As he campaigned on such things as encouraging an increased focus on math and science in educating our young, he clearly wants our nation to have a prepared workforce for an economy that is global and reflecting 21st Century realities. I may be going out on a limb here, way out there where the best flowering buds are, but President Obama probably isn’t too likely to have as his job creation strategy a program encouraging the development of vocational training focused on planting, harvesting, and processing (i.e. “trimming”) skills associated with producing marijuana. After all, I’m sure he had this picture in mind, a picture showing the realities of an economy based basicly on marijuana “production”:
Anyway, it’s not news to anyone that marijuana is the number one cash crop in Mendocino County (and in California, with the number in 2006 at $14 billion). What Obama cleverly avoided answering was the specific rationale for calls to legalize this herb, such as the one fleshed out in California Assemblyman Tony Ammiano’s introduction of a bill in February to legalize and TAX marijuana. Everyone in this region is basicly extremely pleased, on the other hand, with the Obama Administration policy— announced by the Attorney General—of the federal government NOT interfering with the use, growth, and distribution of marijuana when any of the above doesn’t violate BOTH state and federal laws. So, the feds are now supposed to not impede or stop people from taking advantage of state medical marijuana laws.
Now, the last Point Arena City Council meeting did address a question of a Medical Marijuana Dispensary opening up in town. This agenda item, according to the most recent Independent Coast Observer, “was prompted by an anonymous inquiry to City Clerk Claudia Hillary. Hillary was unsure how to respond to the would-be applicant and was seeking guidance from Council on how to classify the particular business.”
I can understand Claudia’s predicament. How can something like this, which is so pervasively an intimate part of the people and culture (in this locale, of course), be abstracted, dissected, and “classified”? Just doesn’t make sense. In fact, there’s that old injunction: “if it aint broken, don’t fix it”. Near as I can tell, people here don’t have problems accessing their ganja medicine (after obtaining the Sheriff’s card). I agree with Deputy Greg Stefani that such a store “would inspire a previously unseen crime-related activity in Point Arena” (ICO report). Stefani (one of two assigned deputies for this area of the coast), reports the ICO, noted that now “most transactions are privately conducted rather than on the side of the highway or out of a storefront.” So, in this town (population 456), a natural (and peaceful, compared to the violence going on over pot in other parts of Mendocino County) economic process related to marijuana has developed on this part of the coast and no store dispensing marijuana seems necessary here. (Note: the ICO reported that Deputy Stefani was offering his personal opinion and not reflecting Sheriff Department policies on medical marijuana, which btw are okay.)



















































