Growing Pains: Recreational cannabis industry sparks struggle for water rights in parched New Mexico
When New Mexicos recreational cannabis bill was signed into law in April, Mike Hinkle and Ryan Timmermans jumped at the chance to get into the industry. The two business partners, both recent transplants from the South, bought portable buildings, seeds, grow lights and a property in the village of Carson, with a domestic well they thought they could use to irrigate their plants. In total, they invested more than $50,000.
Thats actually the most money Ive ever had in my life, Hinkle said. I was extremely excited because we thought we had a shot.
Three months later, Hinkle fought back tears as he spoke at a hearing about regulations for the new cannabis industry, held at the State Capitol. Hed discovered that a domestic water supply would not fulfill the requirements for a license and that no amount of money would get him the required water rights in Carson, near Taos because they simply werent available. He was still emotional when the three-minute timer ran out and his mic was cut off.
Hinkle was not alone in his dismay. Nearly 200 people submitted written comments to the states newly formed Cannabis Control Division, while dozens of others voiced frustrations at the Aug. 6 hearing. Among them were aspiring cannabis business owners and members of acequia collectives traditional ditch-irrigation communities worried that the new rules would undermine their senior water rights. Most shared a central concern: water.
Read more: https://searchlightnm.org/recreational-cannabis-sparks-struggle-for-water-rights-in-parched-new-mexico/