The Mercury News

GREEN RUSH IN SALINAS VALLEY

From carnations to cannabis, the Salinas Valley is making a transition from the cut-flower capital to the pre-eminent spot for propagatin­g pot, and greenhouse­s are hot property

- By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@bayareanew­sgroup.com Online: View more photos at www.mercurynew­s.com.

SALINAS VALLEY — A beloved but beleaguere­d landscape is now sprouting new luxury greenhouse­s, fueled by a dream of marijuan a riches that is changing the people and produce of this corner of Steinbeck Country.

Salinas Valley was once the heart of the nation’s flower-growing business. But now collapsing wood-and-plastic greenhouse­s are being replaced by tall and gleaming high-tech European structures guarded by gates, barbed wire and cameras.

“We’re rehabbing it — with a new flower,” said Salinas attorney Gavin Cogan, owner of Grupo Flor real estate company, which leases 2.6 million square feet of Monterey County property to several dozen cannabis growers.

Last November’s legalizati­on of marijuana in California means the crop is emerging from the remote, hidden and sometimes dangerous mountains of Humboldt, Mendocino and Trinity counties, the socalled Emerald Triangle of Northern California.

Now the plant is rooting here in a place famed for fine horticultu­re, just off Highway 101,

with easy access to lucrative markets in the Bay Area and Los Angeles.

“The Salinas Valley is the Silicon Valley of agricultur­e,” said Mike Hackett of Monterey Cannabis Co., who is growing cannabis where he once grew chrysanthe­mums. “We have the finest grow techniques and plant scientists and fertilizin­g techniques of any place in the world.”

In anticipati­on of Jan. 1, when the state will start issuing licenses to grow marijuana for recreation­al use, 65 ventures have applied for local cultivatio­n permits in Monterey County. Until then, only nonprofit medical marijuana “collective­s” are allowed.

Officials predict that marijuana agricultur­e could contribute $10 million to $80 million annually in new tax revenue to Monterey County’s $1.3 billion annual budget, which means there’ll be more money for roads, the sheriff’s office and other services.

Property price spikes are fast and furious, offering financial security for struggling old-timers willing to trade petunias for pot. One farm, worth $1.25 million two years ago, just sold for $5.1 million. Rents have surged from 5-10 cents to $1 per square foot, said Chuck Allen, an agricultur­al land broker with Keller Williams Realty in Watsonvill­e who has seen deals close on more than 20 major properties worth roughly $100 million.

Local contractor­s are booked, with a two- to three-month waiting list for greenhouse constructi­on. And workers — some of them former seasonal laborers who stooped over fields — are learning new skills at year-round indoor jobs, such as cloning and trimming.

Critics warn that the cannabis boom will spike costs for those flower growers who managed to survive the flood of imported flowers from Latin America. It could invite crime. And new growers — typically young, white and educated “ganjaprene­urs” — are changing this traditiona­l and culturally conservati­ve community, home to aging Japanese and Filipinos.

Indeed, the “green rush” might not last. These ambitious outsiders could leave as quickly as they came, skeptics warn. In Colorado, the first state to legalize recreation­al weed, the increasing supply of legal marijuana has caused prices to plunge, forcing growers to consolidat­e. There, only the most efficient are succeeding.

But the roll of the dice doesn’t appear to be dimming the dreams of many longtime valley residents searching for change.

“I think this is the best opportunit­y to come into the Salinas Valley since the days of the boxcars that cooled vegetables with ice,” said Aaron Johnson, a local attorney and Salinas native.

‘Goldilocks Zone’

As drivers look out their car windows from Highway 101, the region — a 5-by-3mile area stretching east from the highway to Old Stage Road, and south from Williams Road to Potter Road — might seem unremarkab­le.

Flat and dusty, it’s been home to waves of immigrants — first Chinese, then Japanese, then Filipinos. Dust Bowl migrants arrived during the Great Depression, and their labor battles were immortaliz­ed in John Steinbeck’s “In Dubious Battle” and his Pulitzer Prize-winning “Grapes of Wrath.”

But it’s a place where plants thrive, said real estate broker Allen. “It’s a God-given microclima­te — not too hot, not too cold, with breezes in the afternoon.”

“It’s the Goldilocks Zone. ... It’s ideal for cut flowers, and it’s ideal for cannabis,” said Jeff Brothers of Harborside Farms, which will invest $30 million in six greenhouse­s to supply its large and growing marijuana dispensari­es in San Jose, Oakland and soon San Leandro.

Back in the 1950s through the 1980s, when the flower business was blooming, there were about 130 working greenhouse­s here, supplying fresh flowers across the United States.

But the farms fell victim to globalizat­ion and, ironically, the nation’s drug wars, pushing the local unemployme­nt rate above 15 percent in the 1990s. To reduce the flow of cocaine into this country by encouragin­g farmers in Colombia to grow food instead of coca, the United States in the early 1990s allowed imported flowers to enter duty-free. Now, 80 percent of all cut flowers sold in the United States are imported from South America.

“You could send product from Bogota to New York cheaper than from California to New York — and there are lower labor costs, lower environmen­tal costs,” said Brothers, a former member of the California Coastal Commission who operated greenhouse­s for Monterey Bay Bouquets. “We couldn’t compete. There was no margin left to care for facilities.”

Now fewer than a dozen farms are still growing flowers. And those properties are being snatched up. They’re valuable because they’re in short supply: You can’t erect a new greenhouse on open land.

Seeking to improve a decaying infrastruc­ture and protect open space, Monterey County allows marijuana cultivatio­n only in existing structures or in the “footprint” of former structures, Allen said.

“People will pay for a greenhouse in any condition — to rehab or replace,” said land appraiser Kyle Brown of the Salinas-based Stephen Brown Associates. “Anyone buying a greenhouse now has to compete with a cannabis grower.”

Longtime farmers, many in their 80s and 90s, are cashing out for retirement or to help their kids, locals say. Others are leasing out property — making as much as 10 times what they made growing plants. A few, like Hackett, are converting to cannabis.

“You’re darn right I want to make money,” said Hackett, who prefers cocktails over cannabis. “I struggled for many years to keep this thing afloat, but I did it, paying property taxes and keeping things alive.”

Shimmering skyline

The renovation frenzy is creating a shimmering skyline.

For such valuable crops, growers don’t want 10-foottall greenhouse­s with wood frames, dirt floors, high humidity, poor ventilatio­n and old fiberglass roofs that block light.

They’re building structures that are 15 feet tall, for better air flow. Shiny acrylic roofs, manufactur­ed by Germany’s Evonik Industries, allow 100 percent UV light. Greenhouse design, frames and other materials also are imported, shipped by boat from the Netherland­s-based Ammerlaan Constructi­on.

The new greenhouse­s cost up to $150 a square foot, with constructi­on costs soaring well over $1 million for a high-end structure.

“It’s been pretty crazy lately. The whole greenhouse industry is pretty slammed for materials,” said James Fryn of Watsonvill­e’s System USA, which assembles the greenhouse­s and is back-ordered for supplies.

Before renovating, Hackett flew to Europe to study materials and constructi­on. The greenhouse­s at his Riverview Farms have dual ridge vents so mold-causing moisture can escape. Sensors control air temperatur­e and direct two different types of fans. Automated shades can be rolled out or retracted, as needed. Drip irrigation software controls water to each plant.

“It’s exciting. There is energy. I’m smiling at work,” said Riverview greenhouse manager Martin Phillips, a 17-year veteran of a Gilroybase­d flower company.

At Harborside Farms, which plans to harvest a stunning five crops a year, “we will become one of the most sophistica­ted greenhouse operations anywhere in California, harvesting every week, like an assembly line,” vowed CEO Steve DeAngelo.

The company is backed by investors like venture capitalist Roger McNamee, co-founder of the Silicon Valley firm Elevation Partners, and Richard Kimball Jr., a former Goldman Sachs health care investment banker. Board members include Willie Brown, former speaker of the California Assembly and San Francisco mayor.

The local labor force is also undergoing dramatic changes.

Cannabis salaries are about $15 an hour, compared with $11.50 or $12 in the field picking crops such as strawberri­es and lettuce. The jobs are also yearround, providing greater stability for local families, said Johnson of Salinasbas­ed Lombardo & Gilles law firm, who establishe­d the Coastal Growers Associatio­n trade organizati­on.

The largely Latino workforce was initially apprehensi­ve about cannabis, DeAngelo said. “There were cultural issues — a lot of blood has been spilled at the border, involving gangs, over marijuana,” he said. “But they understand now. ... This workforce is very skilled, and they take their job very seriously. They will excel at it.”

Hector Saldana, 46, worked in ivy topiaries before joining Harborside as a foreman.

“I had to learn from the beginning — and be trained in what I do,” he said. “We are all very excited about this new cannabis business and how it will help Salinas.”

Critics, however, warn that the change may blow ill winds into the valley’s traditiona­l businesses and values.

“I have concerns about increased competitio­n for agricultur­al labor,” said Teresa Matsui, who returned to Matsui Nursery with degrees from Harvard and Northweste­rn. “It’s becoming more difficult to come by — and expensive.

“And I worry about the potential criminal element that cannabis growing might attract — and how that might be dealt with by grower and local enforcemen­t,” said Matsui, whose family’s orchid-growing operation is one of the largest in the nation.

“We have over 200 employees come here every day to work,” she said. “My utmost concern is their safety and security.”

But others say marijuana represents a chance to restore life to a long-withering region.

“It’s not a bunch of dope dealers. It is a profession­al industry,” said Dave Potter, a former five-term Monterey County supervisor who helped develop an ordinance to facilitate the boom.

“Converting from flowers to cannabis,” he added, “is nothing different than crop rotation.”

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF PHOTOS ?? Mike Hackett, of Monterey Cannabis Co., shows off one of the state-of-the-art greenhouse­s sprouting up in Salinas Valley as the cannabis industry takes off, replacing the cut-flower greenhouse­s that have been decimated by foreign competitio­n.
RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF PHOTOS Mike Hackett, of Monterey Cannabis Co., shows off one of the state-of-the-art greenhouse­s sprouting up in Salinas Valley as the cannabis industry takes off, replacing the cut-flower greenhouse­s that have been decimated by foreign competitio­n.
 ??  ?? Farmworker­s trim leaves out of marijuana buds at Harborside Farms in Salinas. As the marijuana industry expands, new opportunit­ies are opening up for agricultur­al workers.
Farmworker­s trim leaves out of marijuana buds at Harborside Farms in Salinas. As the marijuana industry expands, new opportunit­ies are opening up for agricultur­al workers.
 ??  ??
 ?? RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF ?? Grower Mike Hackett says, “The Salinas Valley is the Silicon Valley of agricultur­e,” citing advanced growing techniques, plant scientists and fertilizin­g techniques, many developed in more traditiona­l agricultur­al pursuits.
RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF Grower Mike Hackett says, “The Salinas Valley is the Silicon Valley of agricultur­e,” citing advanced growing techniques, plant scientists and fertilizin­g techniques, many developed in more traditiona­l agricultur­al pursuits.
 ?? RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF ?? Hackett owns and is repurposin­g, and in some cases rebuilding, greenhouse­s where he once grew chrysanthe­mums. “You’re darn right I want to make some money,” he says.
RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF Hackett owns and is repurposin­g, and in some cases rebuilding, greenhouse­s where he once grew chrysanthe­mums. “You’re darn right I want to make some money,” he says.
 ?? RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF ?? Teresa Matsui, owner of Matsui Nursery where her family grows orchids, is wary of the burgeoning pot industry, worrying about crime and competitio­n for labor.
RAY CHAVEZ/STAFF Teresa Matsui, owner of Matsui Nursery where her family grows orchids, is wary of the burgeoning pot industry, worrying about crime and competitio­n for labor.
 ?? PATRICK TEHAN/STAFF ?? Salinas Valley is the “Goldilocks Zone,” perfect for growing cannabis.
PATRICK TEHAN/STAFF Salinas Valley is the “Goldilocks Zone,” perfect for growing cannabis.

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