Worcester is warned against ‘spot zoning’ for marijuana businesses
By
Nick Kotsopoulos
Telegram & Gazette Staff
Posted Mar 11, 2018 at 6:33 PM
Updated Mar 11, 2018 at 6:33 PM
WORCESTER - The city will not be able to limit
the number of recreational marijuana establishments in each of the five
City Council districts, according to an opinion prepared by City
Solicitor David M. Moore.
Mr. Moore has advised the City Council that such a policy likely “would not survive a legal challenge.”
In
a related matter, City Manager Edward M. Augustus Jr. is recommending
additional requirements in new regulations for the licensing and
operation of marijuana retailers.
The
amendment would make it unlawful to operate as a marijuana retailer in
the city without a license from the License Commission and the state
Cannabis Control Commission, and without an executed community host
agreement with the city.
Under state law,
Worcester is required to allow the establishment of up to 15 regulated
recreational marijuana establishments. That represents 20 percent of the
number of licenses issued by the city for the retail sale of alcohol
not to be drunk on the premises.
The
Cannabis Control Commission is scheduled to begin accepting applications
for marijuana establishments on April 1 and those that receive licenses
will be allowed to open as early as July 1.
While
the City Council has initiated the process for establishing regulations
for the siting of such establishments, some councilors believe they do
not go far enough to safeguard certain areas of the city from becoming
magnets for these businesses.
District 2
Councilor Candy-Mero Carlson recently suggested allowing no more than
three marijuana establishments in each of the five City Council
districts. She said that would spread them out across the city and
prevent saturation in certain areas.
But
the city solicitor said he does not believe such a strategy could be
deployed in Worcester. Mr. Moore said a limit on the number of
establishments per City Council district would most likely be viewed by
the courts as inconsistent with the state marijuana law.
He added that election district boundary lines
and zoning district boundary lines promote different public goals, and
it would be inconsistent to use election district lines for zoning.
“The
use of election district lines can only serve the purposes for which
the line was drawn,” the solicitor wrote in an opinion that will be
taken up by the City Council Tuesday night. “To use it to play a
significant role in the determination of the locations approved for
marijuana establishments would, in my opinion, be invalidated by the
courts as not appropriately related to the purposes served by the
election district lines.”
Also, Mr. Moore
said any attempt to modify pre-existing land uses and the locations of
existing zoning districts to address concerns of oversaturation in
certain areas of the city would likely be found to be spot zoning.
“The
state marijuana law creates a unique system for limiting the number of
establishments in any one city or town,” Mr. Moore wrote. “Because the
state marijuana law is quite specific as to the numerical limits
available to municipalities, I believe that the courts will find that
any other form of numerical limitation would be nullified as
inconsistent with the marijuana law,” he added.
Mr. Augustus said he concurs with the solicitor’s reasoning and conclusion.
“While this is a new area of law, it stands to
reason that additional limitation language runs the risk of being
invalidated as inconsistent with the new state marijuana law,” the
manager said
Mr. Augustus noted that the
city is addressing issues associated with the siting of recreational
marijuana establishments from a zoning, licensing and policing
perspective.
He added the city will take all appropriate
measures to prevent or mitigate any of the issues that can be expected
from the siting of these businesses.
Last
month, the City Council referred to the Planning Board amendments to the
city’s zoning ordinance recommended by the city manager. The proposals
would ban recreational marijuana establishments in all residential-zoned
areas and prevent their siting within 500 feet of schools, public
parks, playgrounds, licensed day care centers and public libraries.
The special permits for such establishments would be issued by the Planning Board.
In
an effort to provide further safeguards for the city, Mr. Augustus is
recommending an amendment to the city ordinance adopted by the City
Council in January governing the retail sale of marijuana.
He
said the amendment would enable the city to further regulate, improve
compliance, deter illegal sales and impose reasonable safeguards to
govern the time, place and manner of marijuana establishment operations.
The
requirements would be in addition to the special permit requirements
that are already part of the city’s regulatory framework, the manager
said.
Marijuana retailers would be required to
obtain an annual license from the city License Commission, and they
would have to have a signed community host agreement with the city.
Licensees
would be required to submit a security plan to the License Commission,
detailing all security measures that will be taken to ensure patron and
community safety, and to eliminate unauthorized access to the premises.
In
addition, marijuana would not be allowed to be smoked, eaten or
consumed within the licensed premises of a marijuana retailers.
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