my county allows me to.
Local Prop 215 Cultivation & Possession Guidelines for Medical Marijuana under California State Law SB 420
Explanation of SB420 Guidelines
*** Localities NOT listed below adhere to CA state default guidelines of 6 mature / 12 immature plants & 8 oz. of dried processed marijuana
Berkeley
- Ordinance allows 10 plants and 2.5 lbs per patient, or up to 50 plants, 12.5 lbs for collectives.
Butte Co.
- County guidelines : 6 mature or 12 immature plants, 1 pound processed material. Official Butte County policy regarding caregivers, collectives, and coops.
Calaveras Co.
- Board of Supervisors approved: 6 plants and 2 pounds.
Del Norte Co.
- County adopted Sonoma cultivation guidelines with maximum 100 square feet cultivation area and 99 plants or fewer; one pound possession limit (approved by Board of Supervisors 4/22/02)
El Dorado Co.
- Sheriff & DA policy: Indoors - 10 flowering plants + 10 vegging + 1 mother; Outdoors: 20 starters or 10 mature plants, 1 - 2 lb processed marijuana depending on season of year. Details of El Dorado guidelines
Humboldt Co.
- County guidelines allow patients 100 square feet and 3 lbs w/ no plant number limit. City of Eureka PD and CHP enforce SB 420 limits (6 mature/12 immature plants, 1/2 lb).
Patient ID cards available for county residents from Dept. of Public Health (707)268-2185.
Mendocino Co.
- 25 plants & 2 lbs. processed marijuana per patient.
Patients may obtain zip-ties for medical marijuana plants from the Sheriff's Dept (707) 463-4411.
Nevada Co.
- New policy Jun 2007: Cultivation: 6 mature female plants or 75 square feet of plant canopy (previously 10 plants not to yield more than 2 lbs). Possession: 2 lbs processed marijuana - consistent with patient's recommendation.
Oakland
- Indoors - 72 plants in maximum 32 sq. ft growing area. Outdoors - 20 plants, no area limit. Weight limit 3 lbs dried marijuana per patient. Collective gardens limited to 3 patients. Dispensaries serving four or more patients are allowed max. 6 mature and 12 immature plants and 1/2 pound per patient.
San Diego (also Chula Vista)
- City Council guidelines allow up to 1 lb of marijuana, 24 plants in 64 square feet indoors; no outdoors growing allowed except in enclosed greenhouses. Text of San Diego Guidelines
San Francisco
- Patients allowed up to 24 plants or 25 square feet of canopy; dispensary gardens capped at 99 plants in 100 square feet. Possession limit 8 oz. dried cannabis per patient.
Santa Cruz
- County guidelines allow cultivation of up to 100 sq feet of canopy and 3 lbs of marijuana.
Sonoma Co.
- Guidelines permit 3 lbs for possession; maximum 100 square feet cultivation area with 30 plants or fewer (approved Sept 2006)
Trinity Co.
State Guidelines Under SB 420 (Health & Safety Code 11362.7)
[SIZE=-1]H&SC 11362.77(a). A qualified patient or primary caregiver may possess no more than eight ounces of dried marijuana per qualified patient. In addition, a qualified patient or primary caregiver may also maintain no more than sisx mature or 12 immature marijuana plants per qualified patient.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]H &SC 11362.77 (b) If a qualified patient or primary caregiver has a doctor's recommendation that this quantity does not meed the qualified patient's medical needs, the qualified patient or primary caregiver may possess an amount of marijuana consistent with the patient's needs.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]H&SC 11362.77 (c) Counties and cities may retian or enact medical marijuana guidelines allowing qualifieid patients or primary caregivers to exceed the state liits set forth in subdivision (a).[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]H&SC 11362.77 (d) Only the dried mature processed flowers of female cannabis plant or the plant conversion shall be considered when determining allowable quantities of marijuana under this section. [/SIZE]
SB 420 Enforcement Guidelines
- State law, SB 420 (Health & Safety Code 11362.7), which took effect on Jan. 1, 2004, protects Prop. 215 patients from arrest provided they cultivate no more than 6 mature or 12 immature plants and possess no more than 8 ounces of dried marijuana (H&SC 11362.77(a)).
- Counties and cities are authorized to establish higher (but not lower) limits if they wish (H&SC 11362.77(c)). Listed above are those localities that have adopted limits above the state limit.
- Patients who need more marijuana can be exempted from these limits if they obtain a physician's statement specifying that they need more (H&SC 11362.77(b)). While police are often reluctant to recognize such exemptions, they are helpful in court.
- The legality of the SB 420 limits is disputed. California NORML attorneys maintain that SB 420 cannot constitutionally limit the amount of marijuana patients can legally have insofar as Prop. 215 allows them to possess and cultivate whatever is necessary for their personal medical needs. However, this issue has not been settled by the courts. Patients who exceed the limits risk being arrested and having to defend themselves in court. Any patient who needs more than the limits is strongly advised to obtain a physician's exemption.
- Despite supposed protections of SB 420 and Prop 215, patients may still be arrested if law enforcement suspects they are outside the law, for example, by being involved in illegal sales or distribution, or growing plants with excessive yields.
- In general, the state Attorney General has given local authorities discretion in how they enforce Prop. 215, as explained in a letter to local law enforcement officials.