Fifty-Acre Cannabis Operation Gets Green Light in Wine Country

West Coast Farms on Highway 246 proposes to grow marijuana for cannabis oil. The county Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved 46 acres of outdoor cannabis cultivation and two processing buildings on the property, as shown here in an architectural rendering that was presented at the hearing (Courtesy photo)


By Melinda Burns

The largest cannabis operation to come before the county Board of Supervisors – 50 acres of cultivation at the gateway to the fabled Sta. Rita Hills, a federally-designated wine grape-growing region – was approved for a zoning permit in a contentious 3-2 vote on Tuesday.

Santa Barbara West Coast Farms LLC, located on 73 acres on Highway 246, a mile west of Buellton, was before the board on appeal. The county Planning Commission turned down the project in December, saying the proposed area for cannabis cultivation and processing covered too much of the property and would generate “skunky” smells. The commission found that the operation would create conflicts with vintners and other “legacy agriculture,” partly because of the potential for “pesticide drift” onto the lucrative cannabis crop.

But Supervisor Steve Lavagnino, who represents the Santa Maria Valley, wasn’t having any of it. He said Tuesday that to deny West Coast Farms would effectively be to ban all outdoor cannabis cultivation in the Sta. Rita Hills.

“Everybody says this is the wrong place,” Lavagnino said. “That seems to be the argument every time cannabis comes up. It’s easy to tell people to go somewhere else.”

If the board wasn’t going to approve the West Coast Farms cannabis operation, Lavagnino said, “I guess we go out into the Los Padres National Forest to do it illegally because there’s nowhere else for them to go.”

It was the second cannabis project to be approved by the board on Highway 246 in just over a month. On March 17, the board voted 4-0 to allow 22 acres of outdoor cannabis cultivation, including five acres in hoop houses, on 62 acres at Busy Bee Organics, just half a mile east of West Coast Farms. In all, county planners said, 625 acres of cannabis cultivation are proposed in the Sta. Rita Hills, an area seven miles long and three miles wide between the Santa Rosa and La Purisima hills.

Lavagnino said he viewed cannabis as the county’s “one reliable source of income.” The county estimates it will collect $9 million in cannabis taxes this fiscal year, a third of which will be spent on planning and enforcement. The county’s annual budget is about $1 billion.

“We’re in a fiscal crisis,” Lavagnino said. “I don’t know where everybody thinks we’re going to pay for all these things we need to do in this county.”

But the Busy Bee vote and a barrage of opposition to cannabis from residents living with the pungent smell of cannabis along Carpinteria’s urban boundary, where the plants are grown in greenhouses with open vents, prompted the county Planning Commission on March 25 to recommend tighter zoning restrictions for the industry.

Cannabis operations, the commission said, should be required to be compatible with surrounding neighborhoods and to prevent odors that are detrimental to people’s health and comfort. The board has yet to schedule a hearing on the recommendation.

Supervisor Joan Hartmann, who represents the Santa Ynez Valley and part of the Lompoc Valley, rose to the defense of local vintners on Tuesday with a “no” vote on the West Coast Farms plan. For starters, she said, more study is needed to determine whether the volatile oil compounds called “terpenes” that waft onto grapes from cannabis could “taint” the region’s boutique wines. She said that the Sta. Rita Hills had been designated as an American Viticultural Area because its cold nights and warm days were ideal for growing wine grapes. A bottle of Pinot Noir from these vineyards can command $95, Hartmann said.

“This region has been working for 20 years to create a reputation there,” she said. “It takes seven years to get a functioning vineyard. Cannabis can grow anywhere. Santa Rosa Hills is one of a kind.

“We have a thriving wine industry, and I think we’re putting it at risk.”

“Skunks and dumps”

A number of vintners were joined at Tuesday’s “virtual” hearing by several dozen supporters from around the county, including Carpinteria, Solvang and Tepusquet Canyon, who called in or e-mailed letters to be read aloud.

“I get tired of people telling me what it’s like to live here,” said Jackie Thiele, a resident of the Sta. Rita Hills, noting that some supervisors have claimed they can’t smell anything when they drive through. “I live here. We are slowly losing our quality of life. What are we going to look like down the road? Don’t ruin our community by allowing these massive grows.”

If cannabis odor-control systems, which were originally designed for landfills, are not working in Carpinteria inside greenhouses, these critics said, how well will they work in open fields?

Visitors are drawn to the Sta. Rita Hills for its fine wines and scenic setting (Photo: Rocco Ceselin / Pence Winery)

“Wineries cannot sell wine when the air smells like skunks and dumps,” said Blair Pence, the owner of Pence Vineyards & Winery, whose tasting room is across Highway 246 from West Coast Farms. In a letter to the board, Pence, who is the co-founder of Santa Barbara Coalition for Responsible Cannabis, a countywide citizens’ group, said that three-quarters of his business was from direct sales to consumers. They are drawn to the region because they can enjoy wine tasting out-of-doors and stroll around the vineyards, Pence said.

When an illegal cannabis operation popped up a mile away, Pence said, the smell of cannabis drove him and his wife out of their home and into a rental. After a year, he said, the illegal “grow” was finally shut down.

Pence said he had county approval to build a winery on his 38-acre property but has put it on hold. He’s heard the jokes about “CannaBarbara” and believes competitors might try to take away his customers in a business where public perception is everything.

“It could be really bad,” Pence said after Tuesday’s vote. “We’re very afraid as to what this will do … Cannabis wants to ride our coattails.”

No monopoly

West Coast Farms is owned by Scott Rudolph and Kavaughn Bagby, San Diego real estate developers who are reportedly farming cannabis elsewhere. Unlike the majority of cannabis operators in this county, including the owners of Busy Bee, they were not claiming “legal, non-conforming” status – that is, they were not farming cannabis on their land without a permit, based on prior cultivation for medicinal use. And unlike Busy Bee, they were not proposing to grow cannabis in hoop houses, which vintners and residents view as a blight on the landscape.

In a letter to the board, Larry Conlan, an attorney for West Coast Farms, said that the company had done lab studies on Pence’s wine and found “zero effect” from terpene drift. (Pence says the study was not conducted during the critical period when an illegal cannabis grow was operating nearby.)

It is ironic, Conlan said, to criticize cannabis farmers for how they may respond to pesticide drift from neighboring farms and vineyards, when cannabis itself is pesticide-free. Pesticide drift is not allowed under California law, he said.

In addition to 46 acres of cannabis cultivation, West Coast Farms is now approved for four acres for a nursery and two new processing buildings, each 3,000 square feet. The company will flash-freeze marijuana for cannabis oil, bag it and ship it during two monthlong harvests per year, Conlan said, and there will be no drying of cannabis, which typically creates the “skunky” smell.

“There will be no opportunity for detectable, traceable odor,” Conlan told the board.

But several Carpinterians cautioned that the odor-control system that has been installed on greenhouses and will be installed around West Coast Farms doesn’t work very well. “Will we be wearing masks forever?” one speaker asked.   

“Carpinteria still smells?” Lavagnino responded. “We just had an election in Carpinteria.”

“People spent hundreds of thousands of dollars,” he said, to decide “whether cannabis was a hindrance or a help.”

“As far as I can see, Supervisor Williams is still sitting there,” Lavagnino said. “The people of Carpinteria have spoken. The wine industry doesn’t have a monopoly on land-use decisions just because they’re there.”

In fact, Williams won re-election in November with 52 percent of the overall vote and 57 percent in Carpinteria. His challenger, Laura Capps, took him to task for accepting $60,000 in donations from the cannabis industry during the 2016 campaign.

But on Tuesday, Williams and Board Chairman Gregg Hart said they were only “reluctantly” voting for West Coast Farms. Hart, who represents the Goleta Valley, and western Santa Barbara, said he hoped the board would soon take up the question of stricter zoning regulations for cannabis.

Williams made a motion to reduce the cannabis operation at West Coast Farms to 37 acres, but the motion died for lack of support.

“I continue to have concerns about projects of this size on lots of this size,” Williams said, in voting to approve the project.

Board Vice-Chairman Peter Adam, an industrial-scale vegetable grower who represents Orcutt and the City of Lompoc, voted “no.” The county may need revenue, he said, “but this is a bridge too far for me, where we’re going to sacrifice existing businesses that have millions of dollars invested and have somebody move in across the street that’s going to imperil their operation.”

Adam, a staunch conservative, expressed surprise to find himself in alignment with citizens groups who want the board to revisit the county’s one-size-fits-all environmental report for cannabis projects. Terpene taint has not been adequately reviewed, Adam said, and neither has pesticide drift from farming operations next to cannabis.

“There are effects that are worse in retrospect than we thought they were,” he said.

“West Coast has utterly destroyed traditional tribalism,” Adam said. “I’m sitting here with the strangest of bedfellows. Maybe hell has frozen over.”


Melinda Burns is a freelance journalist in Santa Barbara.

Melinda Burns

Written by Melinda Burns

Melinda Burns is an investigative journalist with 40 years of experience covering immigration, water, science and the environment. As a community service, she offers her reports to multiple publications in Santa Barbara County, at the same time, for free.

What do you think?

Comments

0 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

14 Comments

  1. Vintners were okay with mowing down 1,000s of oak trees. A great many of the trees removed were 100+ years old. Lost to us all is the old growth habitat those ancient oaks provided. Some oaks were species of red and blue oak——-now gone forever. Now we have “green deserts” of vineyards. Maybe the future is cannabis wine.

  2. Fifty acres; more commercial cannabis than most counties in the state, combined. Forget the wineries- how about the SY Valley community plan? View corridor? Legacy Ag? All the things that enviro groups eg EDC and others used to claim to care about- when they opposed industrial ag operations in the past.
    Silent now, because…. cannabis is… cool? Who knows. But they have abandoned all credibility in any future claims of Caring about preservation of Ag.

  3. California has protection acts against anyone cutting down Oaks- If you ever visit a vineyard you will see that there are oaks growning among the vines. Yeah, white plastic covered hoop structures covering 100’s of acres of pot, that can be seen from the top of Figueroa Mountain for miles is so much more pleasing to the environment and the eye… LOL

  4. You know lots of mature oaks are getting sawed at night under the cloak of darkness too because there are hundreds of ugly, bright white hoop houses everywhere. Hey! Why not green to blend in better? They might as well make them dayglo yellow at the rate they are being erected. The land can’t be that different from where the vineyards grow. Hogwash!

  5. “Williams made a motion to reduce the cannabis operation at West Coast Farms to 37 acres, but the motion died for lack of support.”
    It didn’t die for lack of support, it failed because it wasn’t even an option and he knew it. They could either uphold the appeal or deny the appeal. They could not revise the project as it was a proposed Land Use Permit not a CUP. Williams also stated he was wary of denying the appeal because of the “message it would send to growers”. Really? What about the message you just sent to your own Planning Commission, Local vintners and residents of this county? Upholding this appeal was a slap in the face of those who a actually live and work here, unlike the project applicants who are out of town developers.

  6. I will take a “ green desert” any day over white reflecting hoops, 8ft security fences, security guards, and excessive lighting. Fifty acres of Outdoor cannabis cultivation and processing 7 days a week. Buellton is screwed.

  7. There is a biodegradable plastic product that is used for ‘hoophouses’ in other countries. Pot farms don’t want to use it because it is expensive. Greg Hart is a piece of work. I was bothered by the ‘send a message to other pot farm’ rhetoric in their deliberations as they tried to cover up their mistake (you, Das) in approving this project. That’s not what you are supposed to be doing up there. You are supposed to be weighing each project on its merits….or lack thereof. Janet Wolfe would have made mincemeat of these pot farmers. And she would have listened to her planning commissioner. I pass that area on the 246 on a regular basis and the stench wafting east to Buellton is very unpleasant. It permeates into my car. What a shame the Santa Rita Hills appellation has been destroyed by these greedy pot farm owners and misguided electeds.

  8. This will not only attract good people who turn to pot but to scum as well. We’ve seen it in carp. Lompoc is a great affordable place to live but, some of the scum that reside there will be tempted. Maybe the operators can “shoot on sight” when they deem trespassers on the land. That might hold them off! Poor Pence, business will be hit forsure. He put up a good fight. His coffers weren’t enough to snub it.

  9. You are absolutely correct… This will affect not only Buellton, but Solvang and Santa Ynez with odor. It’s one thing to have indoor/greenhouse grows- This is 70+ ACRES OUTSIDE…! It’s amazing to me that the City “leaders” in Buellton did NOT advise their constituents of what was planned 500 yards outside the City limits, so close to two large housing tracts… Unbelievable that this was pushed through by County Supervisor Steve Lavagnino… Damn the People!

  10. Outdoor pot growing is a risky business. Isn’t it easy to contaminate the crop with just a little bit of illegal pesticide? I heard that one crop failed the testing because they had used ant poison in an adjacent office. And avo growers aren’t allowed to spray their trees due to drift to adjacent pot farms? Seems like one person with a bug bomb could really affect these operations.

  11. A Roadmap of Success
    You start out as a shoe salesman, and you do well, and begin to think that there must be a more profitable occupation, and so you graduate to selling used cars, which doesn’t exactly suit you, and so you move on up to new cars, and then, eventually you break into the luxury car market. But you feel that you have to work so hard and really- is there security in this job? And one day you wake up and realize that the best bang for your buck is in politics, and you’ll have to start out small, and so you become a county supervisor; but really, you’re just a cheap shoe salesman.

Public Library Grants Virtual Access for Thousands of Local Students

Wednesday Update: 440 Confirmed COVID-19 Cases