Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Proposed Cannabis Shop Sharply Divides the Pinedale Community
Edward Smith updated website photo 2024
By Edward Smith
Published 2 years ago on
August 9, 2023

Share

The question of whether the first legal cannabis shop should open in the northwest Fresno neighborhood of Pinedale is dividing residents.

A Pinedale community leader and Clovis Unified School District have authored letters opposing the location even though the business meets the city’s strict regulations for cannabis shops.

Undeterred, opponents say they are concerned about safety, parking, and the site’s proximity to Pinedale Elementary School. They also say that the shop would reinforce the community’s undeserved reputation for drug use.

“It’s literally next door to a residential community,” said Linda Amparano, who is an organizer for the community group Pinedale Matters. “There’s no barrier between the dispensary and the community. It’s literally right next door to a home, a family home that has three children in it.”

But another Pinedale community leader says that the operators of the Embarc cannabis shop have worked hard to engage with the neighborhood. The store, she says, would actually increase safety.

“After researching and getting to know Embarc and their leadership team, I feel Embarc would be a positive business leader that will benefit our community,” said Lisa Guzman, owner of National Hardware in Pinedale and organizer for the Pinedale Community Association.

Guzman and other Pinedale residents actively objected to a previously proposed dispensary in Pinedale. That shop was shot down by Fresno City Council in October 2021.

Embarc already has a cannabis dispensary at Blackstone and Gettysburg avenues. It wants to open in Pinedale at 7363 N. Blackstone Ave. by the end of the year. The Conditional Use Permit required to open had been approved. But an appeal has sent the company back to the Fresno Planning Commission, which will consider the permit on Wednesday, Aug. 16.

Community members and business owners on both sides of the debate say they will attend the meeting.

Opponents Don’t Like the Location

Embarc CEO Lauren Carpenter says she has walked Pinedale and explained to hundreds of residents how the shop would be safe, increase neighborhood security, and decrease illegal marijuana sales. Still, Amparano and others remain unconvinced that the store would be beneficial.

Some children walk past the location going to bus stops, Amparano said. Because the shop would be next door to a pizzeria, a taco shop, and a donut shop, Amparano also worries children will walk past the business when getting food.

Amparano also objects to the distance between the dispensary and nearby Pinedale Elementary. While Embarc is planned outside the city’s required 800-foot distance from the school by more than 200 feet, Amparano says it goes against the “spirit of the law.” Limited parking near the dispensary will also spill out into the neighborhood, she said.

Kelly Avants, chief communications officer for CUSD, said the district also objected to safety issues the dispensary would bring being so close to Pinedale Elementary.

“The objection we have is regarding the location of the dispensary being so close to a school site and the traffic that it would bring,” Avants said.

Embarc CEO: Presence Decreases Open Drug Use, Brings Safety. Some Residents Agree.

Guzman, the hardware store owner, said Embarc and its location — 200 feet farther from Pinedale Elementary than the other company’s proposed site — would bring needed commerce and security to the area.

After speaking with families, Carpenter said she was told that many don’t visit the pizza restaurant near the Embarc anymore because of a vagrancy issue.

Under Embarc’s security plan, the shop would have active armed guards at all times of the day. Carpenter said that businesses like theirs create an “inhospitable environment for vagrancy.”

When they moved into their Gettysburg location, Carpenter said drug use had been evident throughout the former T-Mobile parking lot. They have since cleaned it up with daily sweeps.

“If you spend any time outside our location, you’ll notice there’s really nobody that’s loitering around,” Carpenter said.

Children also wouldn’t be allowed inside the building. For those walking nearby, the nondescript building wouldn’t look like much, she said.

Because Embarc worked to meet federal banking regulations, it can accept credit and debit payments — something not all dispensaries are allowed to do. This reduces the amount of cash kept at the store, Carpenter said.

Carpenter also noted that legal cannabis is “hyper-regulated and highly secure.”

Embarc CEO Lauren Carpenter at its open location on the corner of Blackstone and Gettysburg avenues. (GV Wire/Edward Smith)

What Does Dispensary Do to Pinedale Image?

Amparano said she started the Pinedale Community Association before stepping back in the 90s. After coming back, it was the support of Embarc from some members that caused a split in the group. She then started Pinedale Matters, she said.

The group has held protests as well as a candlelight vigil.

She worries the dispensary will solidify the unjustified image of Pinedale as a place where many people use or sell drugs.

Carpenter counters that cannabis users have been unfairly stigmatized. The average customer is 40 years old, Carpenter said.

In addition, Embarc’s required community plan addresses drug use in children.

Carpenter said at each of their eight stores, a foundation run by community members partners with a nonprofit to create a drug prevention curriculum, funded by 1% of that store’s profits.

The Gettysburg location’s nonprofit partner hasn’t been selected yet, but in six months of operation, funding reached “six figures,” Carpenter said. The foundation in South Lake Tahoe partnered with the local Boys and Girls Club.

Carpenter said the Embarc project has been fully compliant, exceeding standards laid out by the city. She said appeals are a natural part of the process and a “broad base of community support” will get them approval.

“I think the narrative or the notion that the Pinedale community is not supportive of this or open-minded about cannabis simply is not accurate,” Carpenter said.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Moody’s Downgrades US Credit Rating Amid Rising Federal Deficit Concerns

DON'T MISS

Sheriff Says There Are Indications 10 Escapees From New Orleans Jail Had Inside Help

DON'T MISS

DHS Asks for 20,000 National Guard Troops for Immigration Roundups

DON'T MISS

Two Killed in Fresno County Crash Are Identified

DON'T MISS

Supreme Court Rejects Trump Bid to Resume Quick Deportations of Venezuelans

DON'T MISS

Brock Purdy Agrees to 5-Year, $265 Million Extension With the 49ers

DON'T MISS

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow His Government Downsizing to Proceed

DON'T MISS

Ex-FBI Chief Being Investigated Over Social Media Post About Trump

DON'T MISS

Trump Cuts Could Leave 5,500 Fresno County Families Homeless

DON'T MISS

US Stocks Power Within 3% of Their Record as Wall Street Closes Out a Winning Week

UP NEXT

Sheriff Says There Are Indications 10 Escapees From New Orleans Jail Had Inside Help

UP NEXT

DHS Asks for 20,000 National Guard Troops for Immigration Roundups

UP NEXT

Two Killed in Fresno County Crash Are Identified

UP NEXT

Supreme Court Rejects Trump Bid to Resume Quick Deportations of Venezuelans

UP NEXT

Brock Purdy Agrees to 5-Year, $265 Million Extension With the 49ers

UP NEXT

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow His Government Downsizing to Proceed

UP NEXT

Ex-FBI Chief Being Investigated Over Social Media Post About Trump

UP NEXT

Trump Cuts Could Leave 5,500 Fresno County Families Homeless

UP NEXT

US Stocks Power Within 3% of Their Record as Wall Street Closes Out a Winning Week

UP NEXT

Trump Suspends Asylum System, Leaving Immigrants to Face an Uncertain Future

Edward Smith,
Multimedia Journalist
Edward Smith began reporting for GV Wire in May 2023. His reporting career began at Fresno City College, graduating with an associate degree in journalism. After leaving school he spent the next six years with The Business Journal, doing research for the publication as well as covering the restaurant industry. Soon after, he took on real estate and agriculture beats, winning multiple awards at the local, state and national level. You can contact Edward at 559-440-8372 or at Edward.Smith@gvwire.com.

Two Killed in Fresno County Crash Are Identified

11 hours ago

Supreme Court Rejects Trump Bid to Resume Quick Deportations of Venezuelans

12 hours ago

Brock Purdy Agrees to 5-Year, $265 Million Extension With the 49ers

12 hours ago

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow His Government Downsizing to Proceed

12 hours ago

Ex-FBI Chief Being Investigated Over Social Media Post About Trump

12 hours ago

Trump Cuts Could Leave 5,500 Fresno County Families Homeless

13 hours ago

US Stocks Power Within 3% of Their Record as Wall Street Closes Out a Winning Week

13 hours ago

Trump Suspends Asylum System, Leaving Immigrants to Face an Uncertain Future

13 hours ago

Fresno Leaders Oppose Parole for Convicted Serial ‘Tower Rapist’

13 hours ago

US Cable Giants Charter and Cox Pursue $34.5 Billion Merger

13 hours ago

Moody’s Downgrades US Credit Rating Amid Rising Federal Deficit Concerns

WASHINGTON — Moody’s Ratings stripped the U.S. government of its top credit rating Friday, citing successive governments’ failur...

10 hours ago

10 hours ago

Moody’s Downgrades US Credit Rating Amid Rising Federal Deficit Concerns

10 hours ago

Sheriff Says There Are Indications 10 Escapees From New Orleans Jail Had Inside Help

10 hours ago

DHS Asks for 20,000 National Guard Troops for Immigration Roundups

11 hours ago

Two Killed in Fresno County Crash Are Identified

12 hours ago

Supreme Court Rejects Trump Bid to Resume Quick Deportations of Venezuelans

12 hours ago

Brock Purdy Agrees to 5-Year, $265 Million Extension With the 49ers

Trump Portrait May 16, 2025
12 hours ago

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow His Government Downsizing to Proceed

12 hours ago

Ex-FBI Chief Being Investigated Over Social Media Post About Trump

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend