Is This A Sign Of Progress?

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FreeRadical

FreeRadical

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Plan to Convert Vacant Prison to Massive Oil Lab Approved
By Chris Roberts on July 8, 2016@cbloggy

A vacant prison in the Central Valley city of Coalinga — best known to most as a waypoint on Interstate-5 between Los Angeles and San Francisco — will be sold to a cannabis grower for $4.1 million for the purpose of converting the cellblocks to a massive cannabis oil extraction facility, according to the Fresno Bee.

The sale of the prison to Ocean Grown Extracts, an L.A.-based manufacturer of CO2 oil cartridges and other cannabis concentrates, was approved by a 4 to 1 vote at the Coalinga City Council. And the sale will “immediately” bring the struggling city’s finances into the black, according to the newspaper.

The city was up to $3.8 million in debt, City Manager Marissa Trejo said. According to Ocean Grown co-owner Casey Dalton, the prison-turned-lab could be up and running within six months. It’s expected to employ 100 people; already, Dalton’s received 200 job applications, she told the newspaper.

Like other struggling agricultural communities in corners of California, Coalinga has slowly turned to cannabis to fix its economic woes. Other places in the state, like Desert Hot Springs, have experienced unprecedented real estate booms after voting to allow vacant warehouse space to be turned into massive growhouses or extraction labs.

Earlier in the year, the city voted to allow medical marijuana cultivation, dispensaries, and delivery services — a rarity in red parts of the state like the Central Valley. That caused an outcry, so the city took a step back. Dispensaries and deliveries are still illegal, but could come online in the next few months, while an emergency ordinance will allow Ocean Grown to begin work on the prison to make it suitable to extract cannabis.

After six months of hot debate, there was no outcry — or comment of any kind — from the public before the council took its lopsided vote.

“It’s like the Grateful Dead said — what a long, strange trip it’s been,” Coalinga Mayor Pro-Tem Patrick Keough told the newspaper.

The prison is 77,000 square feet, according to the newspaper. It will have to remain gated, locked, and under security surveillance and must remain closed to the public. All cultivation operations in the city will have to remain discreet, with no signage or noticeable smells.

There is “one potential snag,” as the paper reported: water. The Central Valley has been bone dry for the past few years as California’s epic drought dragged on. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation — a federal agency, and cannabis is still a Schedule I controlled substance under federal law — says it will “report” Coalinga if any water is diverted to the former prison.

There’s no backup plan to put the prison on city water if that happens, city officials told the Bee.

Chris Roberts has written about medical cannabis, drug policy, and legalization ever since spending a few months in Humboldt County in 2009, with bylines for the San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, and SF Weekly. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @cbloggy.
 
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Seamaiden

Seamaiden

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Hi FreeRadical. We certainly welcome seeing posts like this, but hyperlinking photos is not allowed so I've removed those. Also, it would make reading a lot easier if you didn't copy and paste the adverts and other unrelated stuff, so I took that out, too.

To answer your question, YES! Of course this is progress! Not only was a jail closed down, but it was legally repurposed (instead of being torn down) for a new kind of business venture in California. Legal extractions, a la MMRSA. Considering everything that's affected by this, I can see it as nothing but progress.
 
FreeRadical

FreeRadical

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Sorry about the adverts and hyperlinks. I did it on my phone and until about 2 minutes ago didn't know there was a way to take all that stuff out. Thanks for your answer and your help. I really like every part of the article minus one. It makes no sense to me why the water board would be concerned about them using water. As far as I know you can make plenty of money in the extraction game without growing the cannabis yourself. So since this company is extracting cannabis not growing it why is there a concern that they would divert water at all? I do understand the concern over water in California. Where I lived as a child diverts water and power to California. Not that I have issue with that. Just that it is a pretty good example of how problematic getting enough fresh water can be in California. Shoot that was almost 20 years ago and look at the water problems now. Speaking of which is there any downside to using an r/o filter on desalinated water? As far as to use to grow. I know desalination can taste kinda funny but do plants mind? And just to point out my feelings on growers using water when California and other places are having so much trouble with water. What would you prefer. All that water sitting in a tailings pond or being used to render nuclear power cores safe. Or would you rather we use water to create medicine and food?
 
Seamaiden

Seamaiden

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IIRC the water board/usage stuff was written into MMRSA, so it's kind of a forced issue for everyone.

That said, I have NOT dug into most of the text of the MMRSA set of legislation. It is thick, and it keeps changing.

Water regulation in the CV needs to become much stricter and the farmers whose water rights have been grandfathered in need a new set of rules, IMO. The flip side of that coin is the amount of water (and fertilizers) many, if not most cannabis cultivators use. Many are very wasteful with these products and that also absolutely needs regulation. The issue with Ocean Grown, as far as I can see, is that they're falling under the umbrella rules set forth in MMRSA's set of regulations. Or, perhaps their activities use a large amount of water (bubble hash, perhaps?). Based on the article though, my impression is that the feds don't want ANY water used for this outfit. In other words, they can't even flush toilets. I'll keep an eye out for developments as the folks who are in on this I believe are members of a group I belong to. I sure hope that sentence made sense!
 
FreeRadical

FreeRadical

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Wow thank you. That was awesome. I didn't even think about bubble hash. let alone toilet water. And yeah some people don't care about the water at all. That kinda scares me sometimes. I love water it does so many amazing things.
 
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