Marijuana: From Societal Scourge to Small Town Salvation?
This California city wants to change its reputation from prison community to legal pot manufacturer.


Adelanto is a small town (population: 31.000) in the deserts of inland Southern California where they send people to prison. That's what it's known for—though for residents of the Inland Empire, it's also known for being worse-off than all the other towns in the area. (During my time living in nearby Barstow, this became a reoccurring joke for us at the newspaper, as Adelanto was always just below Barstow as being worse off in every single economic, crime, and demographic indicator. "At least we're not Adelanto," was the refrain.)
It's a fairly poor community, with a median household wage of $37,000, much lower than the state median of $60,000.
These desert communities were also hit very, very hard by the housing collapse. Home construction boomed in these places, fed by a bubble that put people in freshly built houses they really couldn't afford. After the bubble burst, it was just about ground zero for the worst parade of foreclosures, nearly turning blocks into ghost towns.
But when California citizens voted to loosen marijuana laws and allow for medical use, most of these communities resisted and passed ordinances to prohibit pot dispensaries in their neighborhoods. Blame it on the culture of the drug war: Citizens of these desert communities sometimes directly experience the effects of drug addiction by people that they actually know and end up concluding that the problem is that we're not fighting hard enough. The economic arguments in favor of allowing for sale of marijuana held little sway. Too many people thought it was just bad news.
Now, call it desperation or an enterprising spirit: Adelanto is embracing the future of marijuana legalization. What these desert towns have to offer is lots of geography, and Adelanto has decided to open it up for legal, commercial marijuana cultivation. Adelanto, which once flirted with bankruptcy, is now seeing a land rush and people willing to spend millions to secure property and permits to grow marijuana legally, considering a future where millions of Californians will legally be permitted to enjoy weed recreationally.
Steven Greenhut briefly mentioned Adelanto recently when he wrote about the complex politics and legal issues when drafting and implementing marijuana regulations in California. Brooke Edward Staggs of the Orange County Register trekked over to Adelanto to see what the town was hoping for. It's only the second city in Southern California to permit commercial marijuana growing and they're predicting that being ahead of the curve will pay off:
Joseph Brady, president of the commercial real estate firm the Bradco Companies, said that before Adelanto voted to allow cultivation he'd get one call a week with people interested in buying land or buildings. Since the September vote, he's been averaging five calls a day.
"I've had a broker's license since March 1980," Brady said. "I have never in my life seen anything like this happen."
One plot was valued at $1.5 million before the zoning changed to allow cultivation, he said; now it's in escrow for $4 million.
[Elizabeth] Brown, who's with Lee & Associates, said land that was going for 50 to 90 cents per square foot is now going for $12 to $14.
But is this going to be a boom or another bubble? That is the question. Edwards Staggs doesn't talk about the housing bubble, but she does mention another bubble that followed out in the California desert. For a couple of years, solar energy plants were going to save everybody from the recession. Bolstered by money potentially available from the federal economic stimulus, dozens of solar projects were proposed for the desert last decade. In reality, most of those proposals went nowhere and nothing happened. Only a small fraction of those projects ever came to fruition, and people discovered that solar plants actually were not big job generators.
In this case, given the lack of competition, the city has to figure out how much it wants to milk from growers for its own coffers. The reporter notes that a tax plan similar to nearby Desert Hot Springs (the other town to permit cultivation) could net Adelanto $6 million per year if all goes well, equal to nearly half of the city's entire annual budget. But they're discussing having even higher rates to try to get even more money. The big unknown is whether other cities might change their minds and decide to allow pot growers in, something that is bound to happen if Adelanto succeeds and sloughs off its reputation as the poorest small town in the High Desert. So they have to consider in advance what other towns might potentially do and what incentives they might create to draw away this new industry.
In the meantime, it's nevertheless interesting to note that a town that once focused on its role in America's obsession with incarceration may find its economic survival in the winding down of the drug war. (And as an interesting touch, it could end up driving out the local representation from General Atomics Aeronautics Systems, the manufacturers of the Predator drone, because their landlords can get more money from the marijuana growers.)
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Does growing marijuana in the desert sound feasible without heavily subsidized water?
Sure, if you can afford the water.
For any scale, of course, you'll be using your own well, so subsidies won't be an issue.
OT, but of interest:
Judge slaps DOJ senseless for conspiring with plaintiffs suing to block enforcement of citizenship voting requirements.
http://www.nationalreview.com/.....oj-rebuked
Give it a read. Maybe some of this won't be as appalling to non-lawyers, but as a lawyer, I was appalled by the DOJ.
You beat me to it. Even if you aren't in favor of Voter ID laws, the complete abdication of the DOJ's duties (not to mention the evidence of possible collusion with the plaintiffs) is pretty stunning stuff.
Anyone who has been watching the lawsuits were the EPA is 'sued' by Green groups will recognize the tactic.*
* Yes, I originally posted this comment on the wrong comment branch. Bite my shiny metal ass!
Yeah, that little tactic (and the private e-mail accounts that helped facilitate it) is shady as shit. According to the NRO article it sounds like this judge is dangerously close to issuing sanctions against the DOJ lawyers. I'm not holding my breath but it would go a long way to stopping this practice. As an officer of the court, you have a duty to zealously defend your client, regardless of what you think of them. Government lawyers refusing to defend a law they are sworn to uphold all because their boss wants a policy change? That's not just a failure of your ethical duty, it's a circumvention of the legislative process.
The part where they refused to defend the case, and tried to prohibit the defendants from hiring any other lawyers, was just jaw-dropping to me. What the ever-loving fuck!
Adelanto has a prison?
I've driven through it a dozen times traveling through the Mojave, and I barely noticed it as different-from-Victorville, honestly.
(Ah, Wikipedia tells me there's an illegal-immigrant-detention center there. And evidently a new prison coming in.
There's barely a town there, let alone anything else.)
[Elizabeth] Brown, who's with Lee & Associates, said land that was going for 50 to 90 cents per square foot is now going for $12 to $14.
I would drop the Nolan, too, if i was knee deep in peddling wacky weed to minors!
Unless they are using it to cure brain cancer.
Slightly OT but related:
Doug Peterson tries to say he's for federalism and then trots out the hammer of the Commerce Clause and Raich v. Gonzalez. Quite a few NRO comments that make me feel a bit better about their readership. Operative word being "bit."
http://www.nationalreview.com/.....der-threat
Anyone who has been watching the lawsuits were the EPA is 'sued' by Green groups will recognize the tactic.
In the meantime, it's nevertheless interesting to note that a town that once focused on its role in America's obsession with incarceration may find its economic survival in the winding down of the drug war.
Winding down of the drug war? You mean ramping up of the sex trafficking war?
With all those inmates they already have an experienced workforce. Genius!
Since when is a place with 31,000 residents a small town? Wouldn't a small town be more like 1,000 residents?
That's more like a hamlet.
Mmmmmm...hamlet...
I suppose it depends where you are. In New England, where local government is mostly at the town level, there are lots of incorporated municipalities with populations of a few thousand.
That was my question. Where I am 31000 is a medium sized city. I live in a town with a bit over 1000 residents. If I were to define "small town", I'd put the limit at 5 or 6 thousand residents.
In California, it's a small town.
Then what do you call places with 1000 residents?
A barrio?
[runs]
It's a fairly poor community, with an average media household wage
Being a youtuber probably doesn't pay well for most.
http://www.topdownjackets.com/