Restoration of Illicit Cannabis Sites Bill Signed by Governor
Press release from the Office of Assemblymember Jim Wood:
Governor Newsom signed AB 2643, authored by Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg), a bill targeting the pervasive and detrimental effects of illicit cannabis cultivation on California’s environment.
“Cannabis has been an important issue in the 2nd Assembly District for many years,” said Wood. “This bill focuses on the dangers of illicit cannabis cultivation which poses an immense threat to the California ecosystem and natural resources. In 2015, I authored AB 243, providing direction to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to restore watersheds impacted by illicit cannabis cultivation in key areas of coastal Northern California. Since the original bill passed, site restoration has not met the current need and it must continue.”
Since 2020, CDFW has completed a handful of habitat restoration projects on Trespass Cannabis Cultivation Sites (TCCS) or Complexes (TCCC) using resources from the Cannabis Restoration Grant Program. This limited progress underscores the urgent need for a more robust and systematic approach to restoration efforts.
One of the most concerning issue lies with undetected or unaddressed sites, which pose an unknown scope of environmental impact. These sites, left unaddressed, will continue to affect natural resources indefinitely.
“AB 2643 builds on the original efforts to protect and restore these lands by developing a framework for restoration projects, creating a fund dedicated to environmental remediation and improving the efficiency and transparency of eradication, reclamation and restoration operations,” said Wood.”
AB 2643 has several key provisions to address illicit cannabis cultivation and its environmental impact by requiring the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) to:
⚫ Requires CDFW to study cannabis site restoration and provide guidance for remediating environmental damage, as well as recommending technologies for detecting illicit cultivation through remote sensing and mapping.
⚫ Establishes the Cannabis-Impacted Lands Restoration Fund to allocate enforcement fees from illicit cultivators for environmental remediation, ensuring transparency in fund usage.
⚫Requires CDFW to report annually to the legislature on enforcement and remediation activities, including reconnaissance, eradication, reclamation, and restoration efforts in watersheds impacted by cannabis cultivation.
⚫Updates all references from “controlled substance” to “cannabis or cannabis products” to maintain relevance and enforceability amid potential federal law changes.
⚫Excludes plant and cannabis waste from the hazardous waste definition to put DTSC in alignment with management regulations enforced by DCC, SWRCB and CalRecycle.AB 2643 represents a critical step toward addressing the multifaceted challenges posed by illicit cannabis cultivation in California. By prioritizing habitat restoration, enhancing reconnaissance efforts, and increasing efficiency and transparency, the bill will safeguard California’s environment and natural resources for future generations.
“Illicit cannabis cultivation and the offenders who damage our natural resources and wildlife must not win and we have to ensure that this restoration work be given the priority and focus it deserves,” said Wood.Assemblymember Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg) represents the 2nd Assembly District, which includes all of Del Norte, Trinity, Humboldt and Mendocino counties, plus northern and coastal Sonoma County, including the city of Santa Rosa.
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Yep because we need even more permission to spy on people without getting search warrants first , i mean yeah that same piece of paper that gives us freedoms from such things also is what allows them to govern, if they go against it then they themselves are without proper claim to their laws . Commie pigs !!
wonderful !
Why so punitive? They could spend the money instead funding a grant program for people to clean up their old grows. I know several unemployed people off the top of my head who would love to get a grant to clean up their old grow sites and they would even volunteer their property to be inspected instead of all this sneaky gotcha tactics. Think of it as a jobs program for the now unemployed and impoverished growers who were not allowed to get permits… And truly would like to clean up their mess but can’t even afford dump fees
Grants for dump runs are a great idea. Maybe somehow incentivize guys with trucks to do dump runs for indigent neighbors. This area needs cleaning up, from decades of cheap Chinese imported trash. Also from shitty grow scenes.
What a joke ! The really bad actors have transitioned into corporate entities and state licensed drug cartels . Unfortunately pesticide contamination is a major problem for California consumers.
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https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-06-29/the-dirty-dangerous-secret-of-californias-legal-weed
“California regulators have largely failed to address evidence of widespread contamination in the state’s weed crop.”
Sounds like this is directed at public lands however the private property disaster is just as real. I find it hard to believe the number of deserted grow sites out there w plastic blowing in the wind and pvc stretched as far as the eye can see. I’d venture to say less than 2% cleaned up anything before heading to Oklahoma.
Funny thinking about yesterdays okies, the dust bowl and all that.
reverse migration, same scheming peasants
A lot of the issue is in the desert in SoCal, San Bernardino county. Whack a mole down there, over 400 search warrants last year. The cartel just pops up a new grow and doesn’t clean up the mess.
Another pic
Aside from the desert setting this could be anywhere along Alderpoint road or off Bell springs
my own brother left a real shit show on 8 parcels of land before I harassed him into paying our nephew to clean that shit up Took the kid a month to remove a lot of plastic, pvc and poly tubing but those sites are cleaned up and hopefully returning to forests and prairie
I’m happy we are cleaning up behind ourselves
I mean, why show pics of the desert when there are 100s of places like that within a few miles of us?
I worked for a contractor in SB county two years ago. We bought up a lot for use as a distribution site (not cannabis) and in looking at properties there were three w 20-30 100 foot green houses abandoned after raids. The realtor we were working with told us there were 100 of those sites within couple miles of those parcels. Lots of sun down there but it’s really like hell
nasty dry dusty hell down there. Makes Tucson look like a tropical environment.