monstacropn
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Does anyone know what their proposal for recreational use in california? I've herd it was 4 plant and 6 plants per property?
The "safe harbor" is six mature plants or 12 immature plants with MMJ card.Does anyone know what their proposal for recreational use in california? I've herd it was 4 plant and 6 plants per property?
Many munis have banned all cultivation altogether, again currently. :)
It did, in a manner of speaking, put in place a few measures that were intended to protect patients. In my experience, they didn't offer much protection.SB420 instituted the six-plant safe harbor. However, since then, NORML states on its site: "those limits have been thrown out by the CA Supreme Court; the standard is actually what a patient needs (but we recommend staying within those guidelines if possible)." This Court ruling I was unaware of, but it seems to expand the limit to "what may be necessary to treat a patient's condition."
This is what I'm counting on. However, I'm hearing of local munis putting in place permitting requirements for anyone who wishes to cultivate. The issue will be where they place those permitting laws, who enforces and what the penalties for breaking them will be.Polls indicate CA voters will approve Prop. 64 on Nov. 8 by about 60% to 40%. According to NORML: it will "allow adults 21 years and older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana and cultivate up to six plants for personal use."
So it looks like in 23 days' time there will exist a six-plant safe harbor.
Int'g that Calaveras has at least 1,000 commercial cultivators when a survey showed only about 500 or so people int'd in applying for a c.c. license in LA (I don't recall if that was city or city/county). When you say "you may want to join some groups," do you have any you can recommend?Calaveras, embraced MCRSA and has at least 1,000 commercial scale cultivators,
You may want to join some groups to get a better handle on what's happening, because a lot is happening and it's happening fast.
San Berdoo is attractive, imo, b/c it has warehouse space already built.my new county of residence, San Bernardino, aka the geographically largest county in the U.S.
A few weeks ago, I attended a two-day seminar on the cannabis business in San Diego put on by 420College. Best $300 I ever spent. Learned a ton.You may want to join some groups to get a better handle on what's happening, because a lot is happening and it's happening fast.
I LIKE the way it is now. prop 64 sounds like waaaaaaaayyyyyy more bullshit.
The future involves a bigger grow due to the expected higher taxes that must be overcome, e.g. cultivators @ $9.25/oz. (close to $150 per lb.) and $2.75/oz for leaves. That's just for Cali. Then the city or county tax on top of that, in some cases surprisingly hefty. And fed'l/state income taxes if you go that route.
Now, compared to pre-CAMP Humboldt maybe it's not that great. But everything is different now. 64 is much better than anything in decades.
It is steep. But one takes a lemon and makes lemonade.And those taxes are in addition to the $7500 it'll cost yearly just to be a licensed grower, right? That's friggin' ridiculous.
I don't know about the $7500. I do know that the state tax on licensed cultivation will be $9.25/ounce, or about $148/lb. Then there is either the city or county tax. For this, I have seen some up to $25/sq. ft.And those taxes are in addition to the $7500 it'll cost yearly just to be a licensed grower, right? That's friggin' ridiculous.