SAN FRANCISCO – Some drought-stricken rivers and streams in Northern California’s coastal forests are being polluted and sucked dry by water-guzzling medical marijuana farms, wildlife officials say – an issue spurring at least one county to try to outlaw personal grows.
State fish and wildlife officials say much of the marijuana being grown in northern counties under the state’s medical pot law is not being used for legal, personal use, but for sale both in California and states where pot is still illegal.
This demand is fueling backyard and larger-scale pot farming, especially in remote Lake, Humboldt and Mendocino counties on the densely forested North Coast, officials said.
“People are coming in, denuding the hillsides, damming the creeks and mixing in fertilizers that are not allowed in the U.S. into our watersheds,” said Denise Rushing, a Lake County supervisor who supports an ordinance essentially banning outdoor grows in populated areas.
“When rains come, it flows downstream into the lake and our water supply,” she said.
Many affected waterways also contain endangered salmon, steelhead and other creatures protected by state and federal law.
Wildlife biologists noticed streams running dry more often over the 18 years since the state passed Proposition 215 but weren’t sure why.
“We knew people were diverting water for marijuana operations, but we wanted to know exactly how much,” said Scott Bauer.
He is the department biologist who studied the pot farms’ effects on four watersheds.
“We didn’t know they could consume all the water in a stream,” he said
So, Bauer turned to Google mapping technology and satellite data.
He wanted to find out where the many gardens are and how many plants each contained.
His study estimates about 30,000 pot plants were being grown in each river system.
He estimates each plant uses about six gallons per day over marijuana’s 150-day growing season.
Some growers and others argue the six-gallon estimate is high, and pot plants can use far less water, depending on size.
He compared that information with government data on stream flows.
He also visited 32 sites with other biologists to verify the mapping data.
He said most grow sites had posted notices identifying them as medical pot farms.
Pot-farm pollution has become a problem in Lake County, south of Bauer’s study area.
The officials there voted unanimously last year to ban outdoor grows.
“Counties are the ultimate arbiter of land-use conflict, so while you have a right to grow marijuana for medicinal use, you don’t have a right to impinge on someone else’s happiness and well-being,” Rushing said.
Saying they were being demonized, pot users challenged the law.
So, they gathered enough signatures to place a referendum on the June 3 ballot.
They argue that grow restrictions like the ones being voted on in Lake County lump the responsible users in with criminals.
“We definitely feel environmental issues are a concern. But more restrictive ... ordinances will force people to start growing in unregulated and illegal places on public land,” said Daniel McClean.
She is a registered nurse and medical marijuana user who opposes the outdoor-grow ban.