The Board of Supervisors makes the following findings in support of the enactment of this Chapter:
(a) 
The County of Tulare has a compelling interest in protecting the public health, safety, and welfare of its residents and businesses, and preserving the peace and integrity of neighborhoods within the unincorporated area.
(b) 
Unregulated personal cultivation of cannabis and unregulated commercial cannabis activities can adversely affect the health, safety, and well-being of the County and its residents. Such adverse effects include, but are not limited to: crime or other illegal activities; negative environmental impacts; dangers posed to youth; and a negative effect on the general quality of life for areas in close proximity to where cannabis is cultivated, stored, manufactured, distributed, or sold.
(c) 
Cannabis plants, whether grown indoors or outdoors, and especially as they mature prior to harvest, may produce a distinctive odor, and may be detectable far beyond property boundaries. The creation of persistent strong odors as cannabis plants mature and flower is offensive to many people, results in complaints of respiratory problems, and creates an attractive nuisance, alerting persons to the location of valuable cannabis plants and creating an increased risk of crime.
(d) 
The County's geography and climate, which include dense vegetated areas that are remote and sparsely populated, as well as substantial agricultural land, provide conditions that are favorable to outdoor cannabis cultivation. Land in Tulare County costs less than in many other parts of the state, and outdoor cannabis growers can achieve a high per-plant yield because of the County's favorable growing conditions. Additionally, the County's remote rural areas and hillsides, such as in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and foothills, provide ideal locations to conceal illicit cultivation operations. These factors, coupled with known activities of certain drug cartels in the area, and continued confusion among the general populace regarding the interaction of state, federal, and local laws, make unincorporated Tulare County attractive to illegal cultivation operations.
(e) 
Outdoor cannabis cultivation, especially within the remote hillside areas, is creating devastating impacts to California's surface and groundwater resources. The State Water Resources Control Board, the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife have seen a dramatic increase in the number of cannabis cultivation operations, and corresponding increases in impacts to water supply and water quality, including the discharges into water of sediments, pesticides, fertilizers, petroleum hydrocarbons, trash, and human waste. These impacts result from unpermitted and unregulated timber clearing, road development, stream diversion for irrigation, land grading, erosion of disturbed surfaces and stream banks, and temporary human occupancy without proper sanitary facilities.
(f) 
In the absence of an updated local regulatory framework, cannabis cultivators will be less likely to learn of, or implement, guidelines that are protective of the public peace, health, safety, welfare, and the environment. Until the County's local cannabis regulations are updated, negative impacts frequently associated with unregulated cannabis cultivation are expected to increase, resulting in an unregulated, unstudied, and potentially significant negative impact on the environment and upon the public peace, health, safety, and general welfare of the unincorporated areas of the County.
(g) 
Comprehensive civil regulation of any location used for cannabis cultivation is proper and necessary to avoid the risks of criminal activity, degradation of the natural environment, malodorous smells, and indoor electrical fire hazards that may result from unregulated cannabis cultivation, which may be especially significant if the amount of cannabis cultivated on a single property is not regulated and significant amounts of cannabis are thereby allowed to be concentrated in one place.
(h) 
The California Attorney General's Guidelines for the Security and Non-Diversion of Marijuana Grown for Medical Use specifically recognize that the cultivation or other concentration of marijuana in any location without adequate security increases the risk that surrounding homes or businesses may be negatively impacted by nuisance activity such as loitering or crime. (Cal. Dept. of Justice, Guidelines for the Security and Non-Diversion of Marijuana Grown for Medical Use (Aug. 2008) p. 11.)
(i) 
The defense to criminal prosecution provided to qualified patients and their primary caregivers under the Compassionate Use Act (Proposition 215, also referred to as the "CUA") to cultivate cannabis plants for medicinal purposes does not confer the right to establish a land use not expressly allowed in zoning or to create or maintain a public nuisance. See Browne v. County of Tehama, 213 Cal. App. 4th (2013); City of Riverside v. Inland Empire Patients Health & Wellness Center, Inc. (2013), 56 Cal. 4th 729; also see Maral v. City of Live Oak (2013), 221 Cal. App. 4th 975. By adopting the regulations contained in Section 15.3 of the Zoning Ordinance and in Part V, Chapter 11 of the Tulare County Ordinance Code, the County is minimizing the risks and complaints regarding fire, odor, crime, nuisance, and pollution caused or threatened by the unregulated cannabis activities in the unincorporated area of Tulare County.
(j) 
Comprehensive restriction of the land and buildings used for cannabis activities, including personal cultivation, is proper and necessary to address the risks and adverse impacts identified herein. These risks are especially significant if the amount of cannabis in a single area is not regulated and substantial amounts of cannabis are thereby allowed to be concentrated in one place.
(k) 
Children are particularly vulnerable to the effects of cannabis use, and the presence of cannabis plants is an attractive nuisance for children, creating an unreasonable hazard in areas frequented by children including schools, parks, churches, and other similar locations. Further, the potential for criminal activities associated with cannabis cultivation in such locations poses heightened risks that children will be involved or endangered. Therefore, commercial cannabis activities, as well as the outdoor personal cultivation, in areas where children congregate adversely affects the public safety and welfare.
(l) 
The indoor cultivation of substantial amounts of cannabis within a residence also presents potential health, safety, and welfare risks to those living in the residence, especially to children. These risks include, but are not limited to: increased risk of fire from grow light systems that do not comply with all building codes, or from a large quantity of cannabis that is being dried or processed in the building; exposure to fertilizers, pesticides, anti-fungus/mold agents; and exposure to potential property crimes targeting the residence. As such, reasonable regulations are necessary to protect individual adult residents and children from dangers related to indoor cannabis cultivation.
(m) 
Significant recent changes to state cannabis laws, which (i) authorize certain personal "adult-use" cannabis activities and (ii) provide new state regulatory and licensing frameworks for commercial medicinal and adult-use cannabis activities, have not eliminated the dangers posed to the residents of Tulare County regarding cannabis. This is especially true because cannabis remains a controlled substance under federal law. The Federal Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C. § 801, et seq., makes it unlawful under federal law for any person to cultivate, manufacture, distribute or dispense marijuana, or possess with intent to manufacture, distribute or dispense marijuana. This disconnect between state laws and federal law also creates a potential conflict for the County as it attempts to determine what laws and regulations would best protect the residents of the County of Tulare from the dangers of unregulated cannabis activities.
(n) 
Pursuant to Article XI, section 7 of the California Constitution, the County may adopt and enforce ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws to protect and promote the public health, safety, and welfare of its residents. Furthermore, pursuant to Proposition 64 (also known as the "Control, Regulate, and Tax Adult-Use of Marijuana Act" or "AUMA"), and the Medicinal and Adult-Use Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act ("MAUCRSA"), the County has the authority to adopt and enforce local ordinances that: reasonably regulate actions and conduct related to personal cultivation of cannabis; and regulate businesses licensed under MAUCRSA, including, but not limited to, imposing local zoning and land use requirements, and imposing and requirements related to reducing exposure to secondhand smoke.
(o) 
In adopting these ordinances allowing for two (2) M-licensees and setting reasonable regulations on personal cultivation, the County is attempting to balance the desires of individual qualified patients and primary caregivers, who would like reasonable access to cannabis and cannabis products, with the health, safety, and welfare concerns and risks posed by cannabis activities. In determining that two (2) M-licensees was a sufficient and appropriate number of commercial cannabis entities for the unincorporated areas, the County took the following information under consideration:
1. 
Cannabis activities that cause large amounts of cannabis to be concentrated in a single area, such as a cannabis retail storefront or commercial cultivation site, may increase the risks of crime and public nuisances in the surrounding neighborhoods. To reduce such risks across the County, and to enable law enforcement to more closely monitor the activities around such premises, the lowest number of medicinal cannabis licensed premises should be selected.
2. 
For many years, Tulare County qualified patients and primary caregivers have been able to cultivate a limited amount of medicinal cannabis in their private residences in accordance with the Compassionate Use Act (Proposition 215), and other state and local laws. After November 2016, County residents were also able to cultivate a limited number of adult-use cannabis plants in accordance with Proposition 64 and the reasonable regulations on personal adult-use cultivation established by the County's Interim Ordinances Nos. 3500 and 3502. With this revision to the County's permanent cannabis ordinances, individuals will continue to be able to cultivate a limited amount of adult-use and medicinal cannabis in their Private Residences, in accordance with state and local laws. Therefore, the County does not need a substantial number of medicinal cannabis retail locations so that patients can access medicinal cannabis.
3. 
According to the California Department of Public Health statistics, only 383 medical marijuana identification cards total have been issued in Tulare County since 2006, and these cards must be renewed annually. As of May 2018, only 14 individuals in Tulare County have been issued medical marijuana identification cards for this calendar year. Although not all qualified patients or primary caregivers will solicit or receive a medical marijuana identification card, in addition to the criminal protections provided to cardholders, such cards also allow cardholders to avoid paying certain taxes on cannabis purchased at a commercial retail facility. Because of the low number of cardholders, even after the state and some municipalities have begun taxing cannabis transactions, the low number of cardholders suggests that only a small number of individuals in Tulare County may desire to access medicinal cannabis at a retail location.
4. 
For several years, two collectives have been operating in the unincorporated areas of the County, and have thereby provided medicinal cannabis access to County residents. These collectives appear to have provided a sufficient number of locations in the unincorporated areas for qualified patients or primary caregivers to access medicinal cannabis. This conclusion is further supported by the fact that County officials are not regularly receiving feedback from citizens noting a lack of access to medicinal cannabis.
5. 
Additionally, the number of inquiries to County Departments with respect to obtaining a license to operate a commercial cannabis facility has decreased significantly since Proposition 64 was passed and the State developed its licensing regulations.
6. 
Tulare County residents also have access to commercial cannabis retail facilities in any incorporated jurisdictions within Tulare County that have determined to allow commercial cannabis, such as Woodlake or Farmersville. Thus, having a relatively small number of M-licensees in the unincorporated areas would not prevent citizens in Tulare County from accessing medicinal cannabis retail outlets.
(p) 
The adoption of this chapter is necessary and desirable to protect the public health, safety and environmental resources of the County; to ensure safe access to medicinal cannabis for qualified patients and persons with identification cards; to clarify the County's enforcement authority with respect to certain cannabis activities; and to otherwise ensure that public peace, health, safety, welfare, environmental, and nuisance factors related to the cannabis industry are adequately addressed.
(q) 
Business and Professions Code section 26069 provides that for the purposes of that division (relating to commercial cultivation licenses), "cannabis" is considered an "agricultural product." However, the proposed amendments to Section 15.3 of the Zoning Ordinance and Part V, Chapter 11 of the Tulare County Ordinance Code clarify that for the purposes of interpreting the County's Zoning Ordinances and other land use regulations, as well as its Right to Farm Ordinance, cannabis is differently situated than other types of agricultural products or operations. When the County enacted its land use and other regulations related to crop production and Right to Farm, it did not contemplate the possibility of cannabis as a permissible agricultural product, horticultural product, or other "agricultural operations." This is due to cannabis's federal classification as a Schedule I drug; the security concerns associated with a high value crop; and the unique characteristics of cannabis cultivation operations.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
It is the intent of this Chapter to update the Tulare County Ordinance Code to address recent changes to cannabis laws at the state level, in order to continue to promote the health, safety, and general welfare of the residents of the County of Tulare; to protect the environment; and to prevent adverse secondary effects of unregulated cannabis activities from occurring within the County of Tulare.
This Chapter is further intended to prevent community-wide adverse economic impacts, such as increased crime, decreased property values, and the deterioration of neighborhoods which could be brought about by unregulated cannabis activities, or the excessive concentration of commercial medicinal cannabis activities in specific areas, or the location of commercial cannabis activities near incompatible uses such as schools for minors, day care centers, churches that have facilities for children, and parks.
It is, therefore, the purpose of this Chapter to clarify and provide reasonable and uniform regulations regarding both medicinal and adult-use cannabis activities permitted under State law. This Section is not intended to conflict with Federal or State law. Nothing in this section is intended to authorize, legalize or license the establishment, operation or maintenance of any business, building, or use which violates any state or federal laws, regulations, or local ordinances, including County ordinances and regulations, including those relating to public nuisances or unlawful use of cannabis or marijuana. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to burden any defense to criminal prosecution provided by the CUA, the Medical Marijuana Program Act ("MMP"), the Medical Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act ("MCRSA"), Proposition 64, or the MAUCRSA.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
The following definitions apply to all sections or provisions in Chapter 11 of Part V of the Tulare County Ordinance Code:
"Adult-use cannabis" or "adult-use cannabis products"
means cannabis or cannabis products that are intended for adults who are 21 years of age and older and who do not possess a physician's recommendation.
"A-license"
means a state license issued under MAUCRSA for cannabis or cannabis products that are intended for adults who are 21 years of age and older and who do not possess a physician's recommendation.
"Applicant"
means a person who is applying for a License.
"Cannabis,"
for the purposes of this chapter, is defined under MAUCRSA at Business and Professions Code section 26001. Cannabis is also sometimes referred to as "marijuana."
"Cannabis products"
has the same meaning as in Section 11018.1 of the Health and Safety Code.
"Commercial cannabis activity"
includes the cultivation, possession, manufacture, distribution, processing, storing, laboratory testing, packaging, labeling, transportation, delivery or sale of cannabis and cannabis products as provided for in MAUCRSA.
"Cultivate" or "cultivation"
means any activity involving the planting, growing, harvesting, drying, curing, grading, or trimming of cannabis.
"Day care center"
has the same meaning as in Section 1596.76 of the Health and Safety Code.
"Delivery"
means the commercial transfer of cannabis or cannabis products to a customer. "Delivery" also includes the use by a retailer of any technology platform for the commercial transfer or cannabis or cannabis products to a customer.
"Fully enclosed and secure structure"
means a structure that complies with all applicable building codes; and has a complete roof enclosure supported by connecting walls extending from the ground to the roof, and a foundation, slab or equivalent base to which the floor is secured by bolts or similar attachments; is secure against unauthorized entry; and is accessible only through one or more lockable doors. The walls and roof of the fully enclosed and secured structure must be constructed of solid materials that cannot be easily broken through, and must be constructed with non-transparent material. Plastic sheeting, regardless of gauge, or similar products, are not considered solid materials. A fully enclosed and secure accessory structure to a Private Residence must be located upon the parcel on which that Private Residence is situated.
"Identification card"
means a document issued by the State Department of Public Health or a County health department that identifies a person authorized to engage in the medicinal use of cannabis and the person's designated primary caregiver, if any.
"Immature Plant" or "immature"
means a cannabis plant, whether male or female, on which buds are not readily observable by unaided visual examination.
"License"
means a state license issued under MAUCRSA, and includes A-licenses, M-licenses, and Testing Laboratory licenses.
"Licensee"
means any person holding a license under this division for commercial cannabis activity.
"M-license"
means a state license issued under MAUCRSA for commercial cannabis activity involving medicinal cannabis.
"M-licensee"
means any person holding a license under this division for commercial cannabis activity involving medicinal cannabis.
"Mature Plants" or "mature"
means a cannabis plant, whether male or female, on which buds are readily observable by unaided visual examination.
"Medical marijuana collective"
means an entity, facility or location, at a fixed, immobile location, at which two (2) or more qualified patients, persons with an identification card, and the designated primary care givers of qualified patients and persons with an identification card, combined, associate within the unincorporated area of the County of Tulare in order to jointly own and operate the business, facility or location and to collectively cultivate marijuana for medicinal purposes, as provided in Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775 and the Attorney General Guidelines issued pursuant to Health and Safety Code Section 11362.81. However, after January 9, 2019, medical marijuana collectives will no longer have the criminal defenses provided by Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775, as that section will be repealed.
"Medical marijuana cooperative"
means an entity at a fixed, immobile location, properly organized, registered and operated as such a corporation pursuant to Corporations Code Section 12200 et seq. or Food and Agricultural Code Section 54001 et seq., as amended, so that qualified patients, persons with an identification card, and the designated primary caregivers of qualified patients and persons with an identification card may cultivate marijuana for medicinal purposes pursuant to Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775 and the Attorney General Guidelines issued pursuant to Health and Safety Code Section 11362.81. However, after January 9, 2019, medical marijuana cooperatives will no longer have the criminal defenses provided by Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775, as that section will be repealed.
"Medicinal and Adult-Use Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act" or "MAUCRSA"
refers to the division established by SB 94 (2017) at California Business and Professions Code section 26000 et seq., to establish a comprehensive system to control and regulate the cultivation, distribution, transport, storage, manufacturing, processing, and sale of both of the following: (1) medicinal cannabis and medicinal cannabis products for patients with valid physician's recommendations; and (2) adult-use cannabis and adult-use cannabis products for adults 21 years of age and over.
"Medicinal cannabis" or "medicinal cannabis product"
means cannabis or a cannabis product, respectively, intended to be cultivated, processed, or sold for use pursuant to the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 (Proposition 215, found at Section 11362.5 of the Health and Safety Code), by a medicinal cannabis patient in California who possesses a physician's recommendation.
"Outdoor"
means any location not within a fully enclosed and secure structure.
"Owner"
has the same meaning as in Section 26001 of the Business and Professions Code.
"Person"
includes any individual, firm, partnership, joint venture, association, corporation, limited liability company, estate, trust, business trust, receiver, syndicate, or any other group or combination acting as a unit, and the plural as well as the singular.
"Person with an identification card"
means an individual who is a qualified patient who has applied for and received a valid identification card pursuant to this article.
"Personal cultivation"
means possessing, planting, cultivating, harvesting, drying, or processing of living cannabis plants, or possessing the cannabis produced by such plants, in accordance with Health and Safety Code sections 11362.1(a)(3), 11362.2, and 11362.5.
"Premises"
means the designated structure or structures and land specified in a person's application to a State Licensing Agency, which is owned, leased, or otherwise held under the control of the applicant or licensee, where the commercial cannabis activity will be or is conducted. The Premises shall be a contiguous area and shall only be occupied by one licensee.
"Primary caregiver"
has the same meaning as in Section 11362.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
"Private Residence"
means a house, apartment unit, a mobile home, or other similar dwelling, that complies with all applicable building codes. A Private Residence does not include a building owned, leased, or occupied by the County of Tulare.
"Physician's recommendation"
means a recommendation by a physician and surgeon that a patient use cannabis provided in accordance with the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 (Proposition 215), found at Section 11362.5 of the Health and Safety Code.
"Qualified Patient"
has the same meaning as in Section 11362.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
"School"
means institutions of learning for minors, whether public or private, offering instruction in those courses of study required by the California Education Code and maintained pursuant to standards set by the State Board of Education. This definition includes a nursery school, kindergarten, elementary school, middle or junior high school, senior high school, or any special institution of education, but it does not include a vocational or professional institution of higher education, including a community or junior college, college, or university.
"Smoke"
means the particles emitted into the air from any lighted or heated device or pipe, or any other lighted or heated cannabis or cannabis product intended for inhalation, whether natural or synthetic, in any manner or in any form. "Smoke" includes the use of an electronic smoking device that creates an aerosol or vapor, in any manner or in any form, or the use of any oral smoking device for the purpose of circumventing the prohibition of smoking in a place.
"State Licensing Authority"
means the State of California's agency responsible for the issuance, renewal, or reinstatement of a license, or the state agency authorized to take disciplinary action against the commercial cannabis licensee.
"Testing Laboratory"
means a laboratory, facility or entity in the state that offers or performs tests of cannabis or cannabis products.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
This Chapter is cumulative to all other laws, rules, regulations, and remedies now or hereafter available pertaining to cannabis, including any laws related to the regulation or abatement of public nuisances.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
(a) 
The Board of Supervisors of the County of Tulare may set fees from time to time as necessary to recover the County's costs for processing violations of this Chapter, including administrative, investigative and code enforcement costs.
(b) 
The Board of Supervisors of the County of Tulare may collect any nuisance abatement costs by special assessment or lien, as provided for in Chapter 1 of Part IV of the Tulare County Ordinance Code, and Government Code section 25845.
(c) 
All other procedures, including the establishment of a hearing officer and procedures for the hearings and other administrative steps herein, may be established by ordinance or resolution of the Board of Supervisors of the County of Tulare, in accordance with all applicable laws.
(d) 
The remedies in this section are cumulative and do not preclude other remedies under the Tulare County Ordinance Code or other state, federal and local laws. Nothing herein shall preclude the County from seeking other legal or equitable remedies available to it by law.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
Nothing in this Chapter shall be construed as imposing any duty on the Sheriff, the Tulare County Resource Management Agency ("RMA"), the Tulare County Agricultural Commissioner, the Tulare County Health and Human Services Agency, or any other Department of the County of Tulare to take any specific enforcement action with respect to alleged violations of this Chapter, including issuing citations or notices of violations pursuant to this Chapter. Neither the Sheriff, RMA, the Tulare County Agricultural Commissioner, the Tulare County Health and Human Services Agency, nor any other Department of the County of Tulare, nor the County of Tulare, shall be held liable for failure to take any specific enforcement action to correct an alleged violation of this Chapter.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
Neither this Chapter nor any other provision of this Code, or action, failure to act, letter, statement, or any other representation issued by the County or its departments, or their respective representatives, agents, employees, attorneys or assigns, shall create, confer, or convey any vested or nonconforming right or benefit regarding any cannabis activities.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
Notwithstanding any interpretation of "agricultural product" outlined in Business and Professions Code section 26069, for the purposes of the Tulare County Zoning Ordinance and other Tulare County land use regulations, including the Tulare County "Right to Farm" Ordinance (Part VII, Chapter 29 of the Tulare County Ordinance Code), cannabis shall not be considered an agricultural product, horticultural product, or part of "agricultural operations." Furthermore, cannabis shall not be cultivated except in accordance with this Section 15.3 of the Zoning Ordinance and Part V, Chapter 11 of the Tulare County Ordinance Code.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)
The provisions of this Chapter are hereby declared to be severable. If any section, subsection, subdivision, sentence, clause, phrase, portion, or application of this Chapter is for any reason held invalid or unconstitutional by any court of competent jurisdiction, that portion shall be deemed a separate, distinct, and independent provision, and that holding shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this Chapter. The Board of Supervisors hereby declares that it would have enacted this Chapter, each section, subsection, subdivision, sentence, clause, phrase, and portion thereof, irrespective of the fact that any one or more sections, subsections, subdivisions, sentences, clauses, phrases, or portions be declared invalid.
(Added by Ord. No. 3540, effective 9-14-18)