Cannabis factories don’t belong in residential neighborhoods

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This seems pretty obvious to most thinking people, but greenhouse-based cannabis production is not at all like conventional agriculture. Conflating cannabis factories with regular farming makes no sense. Here’s why:
Odors: Regular farming may cause odors a few weeks a year during fertilizing or plowing, for example. Cannabis factories have a 90-day crop turnover, all year long, with overlapping crops, so the very strong odor problem is constant.
Crimes: Cannabis production is a well-known crime magnet. That’s why cannabis production sites have mandated security infrastructure such as lights all night, 8-foot fences required, security cameras, etc. Regular farming has no such security infrastructure mandate, since it’s not a crime magnet.
Hardscape: The most profitable cannabis operations are inside of large hardscaped commercial facilities. Neighbors have no benefit of green open space, viewshed protection, increased wildlife habitat, aquifer recharge, etc, like conventional ag.
Chemicals: Regular farms don’t usually need extremely hazardous chemicals. Cannabis factories use many hazardous and often-flammable chemicals to create hashish “dabs”, “cracks”, etc to boost profits.
There seems to be denial of these facts among county officials who make key decisions about shoehorning Cannabis factories into rural neighborhoods. This is not a joke. Please do your own research on the facts about cannabis factories before the county sticks one next door to you in your quiet rural subdivision.
This is in light of the fact that we have such an abundance of remote non-residential places where cannabis production is perfectly suitable.
Why the denial of facts? Ignorance? Intransigence? Payola? Why?
Please pay attention to this issue. Cannabis factories are not appropriate for residential neighborhoods. They should be way out afield where their stench and crime magnetism will not affect quiet homes.

Bonnie Story
Quilcene