The regulatory landscape around Cannabis in Sonoma County and California more broadly is evolving rapidly. Follow our blog for the latest in commentary and analysis of the evolving issues and regulation.
Marijuana is worsening California's water problems
May 17, 2023
California’s stubbornly persistent illegal cannabis industry isn’t just undercutting the legal market — it’s also behind some of the world’s most blatant water theft. In 2021, at the height of the cannabis water theft crisis, officials in one California County estimated an annual loss of as much as 4,000 acre-feet of water amid reports of supplies being hauled in or groundwater being illegally pumped from the basin. An acre-foot is about 326,000 gallons, enough water to submerge an American football field 1 foot deep
Read MoreNow cannabis wants you to pay for them not to grow
May 3, 2022
For the last decade, cannabis growers having been talking up their water efficiency and fighting to be allowed to grow on every farm, slope, and hill in the county. But now that prices are low and taxpayer handouts are on offer, cannabis wants to be included with our water intensive crops and be paid to fallow.
Read MoreDon't start giving away our water to the highest bidder
April 27, 2022
The cannabis industry claims to have a right to Sonoma's water on the false premise that since it generates more revenues per acre than some of our crops, it's a more efficient user of water. However, in a world where our water rights are not - yet - based on highest ability to pay, this is an irrelevant and dangerous equivalence to be citing.
Read MoreDoes the County's Water Baseline Analysis include its affordable housing commitments?
April 22, 2022
The County has a large affordable housing mandate to fulfill -- yet no one seems to be talking about the additional water demand this will drive.
Read MoreHow did we end up with a 45% cannabis tax break??
April 20, 2022
The Board of Supervisors approved a 45% tax reduction for cannabis operations, taking $800K from county revenue for the 2021/2022 fiscal year. Now, instead of the County funding essential services from cannabis tax revenues, as was promoted in Measure A (the legislation that legalized cannabis in Sonoma County), taxpayers will be shouldering the cost of the cannabis program instead.
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