Thanks
Bravo to the Coalition for Responsible Cannabis for encouraging cannabis businesses to be accountable and neighbor friendly.
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Bravo to the Coalition for Responsible Cannabis for encouraging cannabis businesses to be accountable and neighbor friendly.
The Board of Supervisors requires cannabis growers to pay timely quarterly taxes or lose their licenses.
The county’s cannabis industry generates $10 million less than projected.
Tourism taxes bring $30 million a year, and cannabis businesses accounted for $1.4 million in 2023.
On May 25, a growling, incessant noise began from an industrial blower that generates noise 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
At a June 6 hearing, county supervisors unanimously proposed not to renew business licenses if the grower misses one quarterly tax deadline.
The group alleges that some cultivators are a public nuisance in a push to replace chemical masking agents with state-of-the-art carbon filtration systems.
Commissioner Meagan Harmon says there are “obvious issues at the county level that must be addressed.”
“We kept our promises, and they broke theirs,” a citizens’ coalition says.
Central Coast Agriculture, a major polluter, has 60 days to get clean-air permits, regulators say.