Larimer Commissioners Say Yes And No To Medical Marijuana Centers

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Medical marijuana businesses hoping to operate just outside Fort Collins city limits received split results Monday from the Larimer County commissioners.

The commissioners approved a land-use application from Flower Power Botanicals to operate but turned down a bid from Premier Wellness Center, which sought permission to open a dispensary in the Small Mall Condominiums, a business park at 2321 E. Mulberry St.

The proposed dispensary would not be incompatible with nearby businesses or a residential area less than 1,000 feet away, the commissioners said.

“To me, these special reviews have to have a pretty high bar for compatibility,” Commissioner Steve Johnson said.

Commissioners Tom Donnelly and Lew Gaiter agreed the business would not fit in well with the area, which is southeast of the intersection of Mulberry Street and Timberline Road.

“This is probably a poster child for a property that doesn’t fit,” Donnelly said.

The commissioners were more supportive of Flower Power Botanicals, which would operate out of a warehouse at 1308 Duff Drive in an industrial area off Link Lane in north Fort Collins.

The center would grow and dispense medical marijuana to about 500 patients. It would have about 1,000 mature plants and another 1,000 clones or seedlings in its growing operation.

Owner Peter Verchick said he reached out to surrounding businesses to discuss his plans in addition to sending notification letters as required by the county.
“I have done everything I think I can,” he said.

No one from the public spoke in favor or in opposition to Verchick’s proposal at the public hearing. A few neighboring businesses wrote letters of support for the business.

Donnelly noted the commissioners have voted down other proposed centers that had sought approval to operate in the area. Those proposals were opposed by other businesses in the neighborhood.

“I know this area has struggled in the past and I worry the potential is there for it to degrade further,” he said.

But Donnelly said the plan from Flower Power Botanicals was professional and well thought out.

The absence of opposition to the proposal “speaks volumes,” Gaiter said.

Premier Wellness was opposed by other businesses in the Small Mall, primarily over concerns about parking in the modest development and the possibility that they may not be able to get insurance if a marijuana business moves in.

Scott Stokely of Premier Wellness said the company would make up the difference if other businesses saw their insurance rates go up.

The business, which did not plan to grow marijuana on site, wanted to be an asset to the neighborhood and the Mulberry Corridor, he said. He and his partners are hard-working and honest, Stokely said.

“We are exactly the type of people you want running this type of business,” he said.

But the commissioners said they have to be sensitive to neighborhood concerns.

Following the hearing, Stokely said he holds no ill feelings toward the county or the process Premier Wellness had to go through.

“The fact that they are approving some folks means they are not discriminating,” he said.

The company has spent about $26,000 to apply for a medical marijuana license to operate through the state, he said, that will not be refunded.

Earlier this year the commissioners approved a ban on medical marijuana businesses in unincorporated parts of the county, but allowed businesses going through a land-use review to continue going through the process.

Flower Power is only the second medical marijuana business to be approved by the county.



NewsHawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: coloradoan.com
Author: KEVIN DUGGAN
Copyright: 2010 coloradoan.com
Contact: coloradoan.com | Fort Collins Contact Us | The Coloradoan
Website: Larimer commissioners say yes and no to medical marijuana centers | coloradoan.com | The Coloradoan
 
Back
Top Bottom