Dear Members of the Board of Supervisors,
please remove the True-up tax. I wish our economic reality was different and we had better news. our market share across the state is almost nil at this point. please consider this change and transition toward a structure based on actual production and sales. thus helping keep the legal operators in business in hopes of long-term county revenue. Thanks, Russell w/ Perrin Family Farm
Thank you for your attention to the cannabis business tax within the county. We are writing to join our fellow community members in requesting the elimination of the county's cannabis "true-up" tax.
In rural areas that already face disadvantage due to lack of resources and access to financial opportunities, the requirement to pay taxes on non-existent sales further depletes our communities from being able to participate and thrive in our local economy and county as a whole. Please eliminate this true up tax once and for all.
We are Higher Origins, a cannabis software and supply chain company based in Willits. We serve almost 40 licensed operators in Mendocino County, with a combined county licensed cultivation area of over 170,000 square feet. Both of our founders were born and raised in Mendo, and one still lives on a licensed cannabis farm here. We enjoy exercising our right to vote in local elections, as do our users, friends, families, and neighbors. You may have already heard of us via our recent email to all Supervisors and current candidates requesting public comment on cannabis issues. To date, only one person has responded, a well spoken candidate running to replace one of you.
As of the beginning of 2026, there was 3,592,000 square feet of licensed canopy in Mendo, a drop of ~ 46.5% since the county peak in 2021. Combine that 46.5% with the many cultivators who have had to fallow some or all their canopy area to remain in business, it is no stretch to say that half of the county’s legal cultivation has been lost in 5 years. Out of the 39 counties with data relevant to the same time period, Mendo ranks 29th. This is behind Trinity (22nd with -19.6%, incidentally the poorest county in the state) and Humboldt (27th, with 39.4%). That’s just crop square footage. Let’s look at licensing.
Mendo ranks 4th statewide for most licenses lost, 461. Since 2021, Mendo lost more licenses than other counties like Los Angeles, San Luis Obispo, San Francisco, Kings, Riverside, Calaveras, Nevada, San Diego, Kern, Imperial, Sacramento, Inyo, Colusa, San Mateo, Mono, San Benito, Santa Clara, Marin, Solano, Stanislaus, Siskiyou, and Yuba, COMBINED. These counties are beating us, in an industry that we are an internationally recognized cultural leader in. Trinity and Humboldt, our compatriots in the Emerald Triangle, have proportionally lost less canopy than Mendo, and have also eliminated or seriously reduced their cannabis taxes.
The 2024 General Election saw 39,837 people in Mendo cast votes. To date, there have been 1334 State cannabis licenses issued in Mendo. If we make the conservative yet reasonable assumption that at least 3 constituents have a personal interest in the success of each cannabis license, that makes 4002 people who are influenced by the success or failure of this industry. That’s 10% of the voting electorate, based on an extremely conservative estimate that doesn’t include the non-licensed businesses that rely on the industry, like contractors, soil vendors, consultants, labor crews, water deliverers, landlords, consultants, and hardware vendors.
For every 196 people in this county, there has been one license lost. 196 people who now have less local tax revenue, less people employed in their community, less cash spent in their local stores, and potentially one more illegal grow in their mountains. In a county deeply familiar with the economic benefits of a stable agricultural industry, such as the vineyards prominently displayed on the county website, the resulting negative economic and political impacts are likely obvious to the Board.
How did we get here? Here’s just a short list, directly from real licensees:
-Hoop/greenhouse and outbuilding permitting fees are extortionately high
-Fees in excess of what non-cannabis businesses pay for identical projects
-Inspection fees levied against cannabis licensees in response to unfounded, repetitive, and bad-faith complaints filed against the licensee
-Code enforcement disproportionately focused on cannabis properties, in many cases overlooking blatant violations in neighboring non-cannabis parcels while repeatedly enforcing against cannabis licensees.
-Inconsistent and unclear regulation and enforcement of water metering.
-Satellite surveillance of licensees leading to erroneous fees and license suspension threats.
-Deadlines for fallowing farm canopy that are inconsistent with the actual seasonal planting patterns of cannabis cultivation.
-Repeated delays, extensions, and roadblocks in processing and delivering state mandated grant funding.
-Fees that duplicate fees already charged at the State level
-Water Board requirements applying to regenerative farming practices that are inconsistent with State Policy.
-Unprofessional staff who are demonstrably unfamiliar with the county's published cannabis regulations, with no clear publicly accountable path for complaint or grievance against these staff.
-Unclear and unpublished requirements for cannabis businesses
-Loss, repetition, delay, and erroneous late penalties on paperwork, especially during the term during which Kristen Nevadal served as department head.
-Canopy limits placing Mendo growers at a disadvantage in comparison to neighboring counties, requiring extra licensing to add more canopy is financially prohibitive.
The above serves as a clear signal: The government of Mendocino County has not been a good partner to their constituents in the legal cannabis industry, resulting in massive economic losses for the region. Continued taxation, either through direct taxation or through Byzantine bureaucratic systems, would be an economically self-destructive approach for the government of this county to pursue.
The growers of Mendo are a resilient and dedicated group. Cooperation, knowledge sharing, and shared respect for the land and the cannabis plant have kept them in this business far longer than makes economic sense for most of them. Blood, sweat, tears, debt, college funds, retirement savings, trust, and sanity have all been poured into keeping this industry legal and alive in spite of the burdens and obstacles imposed by the county on this industry alone. Cannabis is integral to the identity of this County, these mountains, and the people who you serve.
Thank you for your time,
The Higher Origins Team, on behalf of the cannabis community that we serve
POSITIONS WE SUPPORT AND SUGGEST YOU LEGISLATE:
-Eliminate all minimum cannabis taxes. Maintain the current or even further reduced tax rate applied only to earned income from cannabis sales after state taxes. Waive all outstanding tax balances derived from any form of minimum tax.
-Waive all renewal fees for existing licenses, cut new licensing fees by 50%, and freeze all licensing fees in years where the previous year saw a reduction in county licensure.
-Eliminate inspection fees on licensed premises in cases where no violation is found, or in the case of violations that can be abated within 72 hours with no county input other than visual inspection.
-Create a public fund for grant money to support local operators in expansion of their onsite distribution and manufacturing capabilities, which would empower local farms to self-brand and approach the lucrative retail market, rather than relying on the rock bottom pricing of the wholesale market
-Create an amnesty program in which licenses lost in the last 4 years can be re-issued their County permits at no additional charge as long as they can satisfy State licensing.
-Eliminate fees on all hoop/greenhouses without concrete slabs.
-For cultivation, remove the per-license square footage cap, and replace it with a publicly debated and voted on cap on total square footage per property. This would allow a licensee to cultivate as many State licenses as they want under one County license associated with that property, without having to pay for multiple County licenses on one property. For example, if the County license cap was voted as one acre per property, then the licensee could have one Medium State license, or many smaller licenses on that property, and only pay one County license fee.
-Eliminate fees on installation/moving of shipping containers on cannabis properties.
-Consider establishing a coalition with the governments of neighboring counties to compare notes on what works and what doesn’t in terms of policy. Include community cannabis licensees in the process wherever possible.
-Eliminate “Demolition fees” on shipping containers and hoop/greenhouses.
-Strongly consider eliminating the cannabis department entirely and returning full control of the program to the department of agriculture. In a public process, reconcile all cannabis department rules with existing department of agriculture rules, effectively rendering cannabis farms indistinguishable from food/vineyard agriculture in the eyes of the County.
-Publicly vote on and publish a set fee schedule for cannabis businesses, explicitly describing the context in which they can be charged, the amounts thereof, and the conditions in which they can be raised.
-Publicly vote on and publish an expected time frame schedule for the processing of Planning and Building permits for cannabis license activities, and establish a waiver of all fees levied upon the licensee in the case that the process exceeds that expected time frame.
-For all Planning and Building fees levied on cannabis licensees, cite the most recent non-cannabis approval for the identical permit/approval in the county records. The cannabis fees cannot exceed the cost-per-square-foot of the cited similar non-cannabis fees.
-Conduct a town hall in 2026, explicitly sending invitations to every county cannabis licensee on record, active or inactive. Send these invitations at least 14 days prior to the town hall. Publish public notice of this town hall on the county website and in the local publications of record. Require the head of the county cannabis program, the head of planning and building, the head of the county tax office, all sitting supervisors, the head of the county Water Board, and any other relevant County employees to be present and empaneled for public discussion for the duration of this town hall. Conduct the town hall in a venue large enough to hold at least 25% of the active licensees in the county. Hold it on a Saturday. Require that the town hall have a minimum time of 5 hours, with at least 75% of that time devoted to open floor questions and answers from licensees. Provide refreshments, ideally. Publish the full unedited video and audio recordings of the event on the County website within 1 week of the town hall.
I am writing to express my support for the removal of the Minimum Tax True Up for cultivators and the lowering or elimination of the excise tax moving forward.
As Supervisors, you are aware of the issues that face our Mendocino cultivators. We appreciate the reductions in the excise tax that have been in place for the past 4 years. The financial reality is that the tax burden is too much for most producers, especially the small farmers of Mendocino County.
The State of California has eliminated the cultivation tax and lowered the excise tax at the retail level. Humboldt County has repealed its Measure S tax and Trinity County lowered their cannbias tax by 80%. Throughout California, municipalities have restructured, reduced, and repealed taxes.
Mendocino County's minimum tax true up needs to be eliminated. We should only be taxed on what is actually sold. It is simply unfair to tax a farm for product that has never been sold, or on revenues that have never been recieved.
For our local small farms to survive and succeed, we must treat them fairly. Please add the elimination of the true up tax to the BOS agenda, and consider a reduction in the excise tax.
Thank you for considering this important issue. Tax relief is needed for the Mendocino cannabis industry.
Currently the entire cannabis industry is in dire straits. It went from boom to bust in a very short time. Mendocino cannabis farms are at a great disadvantage from supply chain issues to canopy size limitations. The wholesale price for cannabis has dropped dramatically since prop 64 was passed. The cost of doing business has been prohibitive the continued heavy taxation has resulted in what can only be referred to an extinction event for once a thriving legacy community of farmers. Those that remain are barely making it. A minimum tax is not only unfair but putting farms out of business. Humboldt County has repealed the cannabis tax. Trinity County also recently reduced their cannabis tax. The state of California did away with the cultivation tax. Give Mendocino farmers a chance to stay in business. Repeal the cannabis tax.
THANK YOU FOR BRINGING BACK THIS ITEM FOR DISCUSSION! (Our original letter, for the record)
Dear Supervisors,
Below is the letter we planned to send and speak on in public comment, but now that the February GGC mtg is cancelled, we wonder if revising tax structure can be added to the agenda for the March GGC mtg.
Happy New Year of the General Government Committee. We are excited you are here, especially since having served before, there is no learning curve and we can jump right in.
Supervisors Haschak and Mulheren, you are both very aware of the unfair tax structure for cannabis, as you have both sponsored prior legislation on this issue. We appreciate your past efforts. and. knowing the reduction in fees is set to expire at the end of 2026, we need you to act again this year to find further tax relief in future years.
Already In 2026, Humboldt County has "repealed" the Measure S cannabis taxes. It seems they got creative and set the amount of a voter initiated tax to zero dollars. And Trinity County also recently reduced their cannabis tax by 80%. The state itself did away with the cultivation tax a couple years ago, thanks to our own Senator McGuire. And the Governor signed amendments last year that lowered the excise tax at retail. Many municipalities have since restructured, reduced, and repealed taxes.
In Mendocino, the minimum tax true up needs to go away. We should only be taxed on what is actually sold. While some folks lobbied you to scale up, we and many other farms have had to lower our canopy size from 10k to 5k just to stay in business. An entire class of people in this County have gone from self-reliant to public assistance in a very short amount of time.
We barely broke even in 2025 and the top three reasons are because of the excessive fees and tax, the lack of a working supply chain access, and the many cannabis-only barriers as a small farm that do not apply to other agricultural endeavors, at both the State and County level. There are actions the County can take to alleviate pressure on all three of those points, but right now, this request is focused on taxes.
We are now 10 years into adult use laws in California and policy is the main reason it is still not a fair playing field. it's a shame that even after the majority of farms from Phase 1 finally got annual licenses from the State last year, the number of active Mendocino licenses are still dropping because there have been many who can no longer continue, overwhelmed by what we outlined above. You know our story, we have expressed it many times at many government meetings. There are still so many hurdles to success.
We want to make sure the tax issue is on the BOS agenda sometime this year and we are willing to help.
Just let us know what you need.
Thank you for your consideration of this matter,
Laura & Marty Clein
Dear Members of the Board of Supervisors,
please remove the True-up tax. I wish our economic reality was different and we had better news. our market share across the state is almost nil at this point. please consider this change and transition toward a structure based on actual production and sales. thus helping keep the legal operators in business in hopes of long-term county revenue. Thanks, Russell w/ Perrin Family Farm
Dear Members of the Board of Supervisors,
Thank you for your attention to the cannabis business tax within the county. We are writing to join our fellow community members in requesting the elimination of the county's cannabis "true-up" tax.
In rural areas that already face disadvantage due to lack of resources and access to financial opportunities, the requirement to pay taxes on non-existent sales further depletes our communities from being able to participate and thrive in our local economy and county as a whole. Please eliminate this true up tax once and for all.
We appreciate your consideration of this matter.
Sun Roots Farm
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Board of Supervisors,
We are Higher Origins, a cannabis software and supply chain company based in Willits. We serve almost 40 licensed operators in Mendocino County, with a combined county licensed cultivation area of over 170,000 square feet. Both of our founders were born and raised in Mendo, and one still lives on a licensed cannabis farm here. We enjoy exercising our right to vote in local elections, as do our users, friends, families, and neighbors. You may have already heard of us via our recent email to all Supervisors and current candidates requesting public comment on cannabis issues. To date, only one person has responded, a well spoken candidate running to replace one of you.
As of the beginning of 2026, there was 3,592,000 square feet of licensed canopy in Mendo, a drop of ~ 46.5% since the county peak in 2021. Combine that 46.5% with the many cultivators who have had to fallow some or all their canopy area to remain in business, it is no stretch to say that half of the county’s legal cultivation has been lost in 5 years. Out of the 39 counties with data relevant to the same time period, Mendo ranks 29th. This is behind Trinity (22nd with -19.6%, incidentally the poorest county in the state) and Humboldt (27th, with 39.4%). That’s just crop square footage. Let’s look at licensing.
Mendo ranks 4th statewide for most licenses lost, 461. Since 2021, Mendo lost more licenses than other counties like Los Angeles, San Luis Obispo, San Francisco, Kings, Riverside, Calaveras, Nevada, San Diego, Kern, Imperial, Sacramento, Inyo, Colusa, San Mateo, Mono, San Benito, Santa Clara, Marin, Solano, Stanislaus, Siskiyou, and Yuba, COMBINED. These counties are beating us, in an industry that we are an internationally recognized cultural leader in. Trinity and Humboldt, our compatriots in the Emerald Triangle, have proportionally lost less canopy than Mendo, and have also eliminated or seriously reduced their cannabis taxes.
The 2024 General Election saw 39,837 people in Mendo cast votes. To date, there have been 1334 State cannabis licenses issued in Mendo. If we make the conservative yet reasonable assumption that at least 3 constituents have a personal interest in the success of each cannabis license, that makes 4002 people who are influenced by the success or failure of this industry. That’s 10% of the voting electorate, based on an extremely conservative estimate that doesn’t include the non-licensed businesses that rely on the industry, like contractors, soil vendors, consultants, labor crews, water deliverers, landlords, consultants, and hardware vendors.
For every 196 people in this county, there has been one license lost. 196 people who now have less local tax revenue, less people employed in their community, less cash spent in their local stores, and potentially one more illegal grow in their mountains. In a county deeply familiar with the economic benefits of a stable agricultural industry, such as the vineyards prominently displayed on the county website, the resulting negative economic and political impacts are likely obvious to the Board.
How did we get here? Here’s just a short list, directly from real licensees:
-Hoop/greenhouse and outbuilding permitting fees are extortionately high
-Fees in excess of what non-cannabis businesses pay for identical projects
-Inspection fees levied against cannabis licensees in response to unfounded, repetitive, and bad-faith complaints filed against the licensee
-Code enforcement disproportionately focused on cannabis properties, in many cases overlooking blatant violations in neighboring non-cannabis parcels while repeatedly enforcing against cannabis licensees.
-Inconsistent and unclear regulation and enforcement of water metering.
-Satellite surveillance of licensees leading to erroneous fees and license suspension threats.
-Deadlines for fallowing farm canopy that are inconsistent with the actual seasonal planting patterns of cannabis cultivation.
-Repeated delays, extensions, and roadblocks in processing and delivering state mandated grant funding.
-Fees that duplicate fees already charged at the State level
-Water Board requirements applying to regenerative farming practices that are inconsistent with State Policy.
-Unprofessional staff who are demonstrably unfamiliar with the county's published cannabis regulations, with no clear publicly accountable path for complaint or grievance against these staff.
-Unclear and unpublished requirements for cannabis businesses
-Loss, repetition, delay, and erroneous late penalties on paperwork, especially during the term during which Kristen Nevadal served as department head.
-Canopy limits placing Mendo growers at a disadvantage in comparison to neighboring counties, requiring extra licensing to add more canopy is financially prohibitive.
The above serves as a clear signal: The government of Mendocino County has not been a good partner to their constituents in the legal cannabis industry, resulting in massive economic losses for the region. Continued taxation, either through direct taxation or through Byzantine bureaucratic systems, would be an economically self-destructive approach for the government of this county to pursue.
The growers of Mendo are a resilient and dedicated group. Cooperation, knowledge sharing, and shared respect for the land and the cannabis plant have kept them in this business far longer than makes economic sense for most of them. Blood, sweat, tears, debt, college funds, retirement savings, trust, and sanity have all been poured into keeping this industry legal and alive in spite of the burdens and obstacles imposed by the county on this industry alone. Cannabis is integral to the identity of this County, these mountains, and the people who you serve.
Thank you for your time,
The Higher Origins Team, on behalf of the cannabis community that we serve
POSITIONS WE SUPPORT AND SUGGEST YOU LEGISLATE:
-Eliminate all minimum cannabis taxes. Maintain the current or even further reduced tax rate applied only to earned income from cannabis sales after state taxes. Waive all outstanding tax balances derived from any form of minimum tax.
-Waive all renewal fees for existing licenses, cut new licensing fees by 50%, and freeze all licensing fees in years where the previous year saw a reduction in county licensure.
-Eliminate inspection fees on licensed premises in cases where no violation is found, or in the case of violations that can be abated within 72 hours with no county input other than visual inspection.
-Create a public fund for grant money to support local operators in expansion of their onsite distribution and manufacturing capabilities, which would empower local farms to self-brand and approach the lucrative retail market, rather than relying on the rock bottom pricing of the wholesale market
-Create an amnesty program in which licenses lost in the last 4 years can be re-issued their County permits at no additional charge as long as they can satisfy State licensing.
-Eliminate fees on all hoop/greenhouses without concrete slabs.
-For cultivation, remove the per-license square footage cap, and replace it with a publicly debated and voted on cap on total square footage per property. This would allow a licensee to cultivate as many State licenses as they want under one County license associated with that property, without having to pay for multiple County licenses on one property. For example, if the County license cap was voted as one acre per property, then the licensee could have one Medium State license, or many smaller licenses on that property, and only pay one County license fee.
-Eliminate fees on installation/moving of shipping containers on cannabis properties.
-Consider establishing a coalition with the governments of neighboring counties to compare notes on what works and what doesn’t in terms of policy. Include community cannabis licensees in the process wherever possible.
-Eliminate “Demolition fees” on shipping containers and hoop/greenhouses.
-Strongly consider eliminating the cannabis department entirely and returning full control of the program to the department of agriculture. In a public process, reconcile all cannabis department rules with existing department of agriculture rules, effectively rendering cannabis farms indistinguishable from food/vineyard agriculture in the eyes of the County.
-Publicly vote on and publish a set fee schedule for cannabis businesses, explicitly describing the context in which they can be charged, the amounts thereof, and the conditions in which they can be raised.
-Publicly vote on and publish an expected time frame schedule for the processing of Planning and Building permits for cannabis license activities, and establish a waiver of all fees levied upon the licensee in the case that the process exceeds that expected time frame.
-For all Planning and Building fees levied on cannabis licensees, cite the most recent non-cannabis approval for the identical permit/approval in the county records. The cannabis fees cannot exceed the cost-per-square-foot of the cited similar non-cannabis fees.
-Conduct a town hall in 2026, explicitly sending invitations to every county cannabis licensee on record, active or inactive. Send these invitations at least 14 days prior to the town hall. Publish public notice of this town hall on the county website and in the local publications of record. Require the head of the county cannabis program, the head of planning and building, the head of the county tax office, all sitting supervisors, the head of the county Water Board, and any other relevant County employees to be present and empaneled for public discussion for the duration of this town hall. Conduct the town hall in a venue large enough to hold at least 25% of the active licensees in the county. Hold it on a Saturday. Require that the town hall have a minimum time of 5 hours, with at least 75% of that time devoted to open floor questions and answers from licensees. Provide refreshments, ideally. Publish the full unedited video and audio recordings of the event on the County website within 1 week of the town hall.
Dear Supervisors,
I am writing to express my support for the removal of the Minimum Tax True Up for cultivators and the lowering or elimination of the excise tax moving forward.
As Supervisors, you are aware of the issues that face our Mendocino cultivators. We appreciate the reductions in the excise tax that have been in place for the past 4 years. The financial reality is that the tax burden is too much for most producers, especially the small farmers of Mendocino County.
The State of California has eliminated the cultivation tax and lowered the excise tax at the retail level. Humboldt County has repealed its Measure S tax and Trinity County lowered their cannbias tax by 80%. Throughout California, municipalities have restructured, reduced, and repealed taxes.
Mendocino County's minimum tax true up needs to be eliminated. We should only be taxed on what is actually sold. It is simply unfair to tax a farm for product that has never been sold, or on revenues that have never been recieved.
For our local small farms to survive and succeed, we must treat them fairly. Please add the elimination of the true up tax to the BOS agenda, and consider a reduction in the excise tax.
Thank you
Michael Adams
Thank you for considering this important issue. Tax relief is needed for the Mendocino cannabis industry.
Currently the entire cannabis industry is in dire straits. It went from boom to bust in a very short time. Mendocino cannabis farms are at a great disadvantage from supply chain issues to canopy size limitations. The wholesale price for cannabis has dropped dramatically since prop 64 was passed. The cost of doing business has been prohibitive the continued heavy taxation has resulted in what can only be referred to an extinction event for once a thriving legacy community of farmers. Those that remain are barely making it. A minimum tax is not only unfair but putting farms out of business. Humboldt County has repealed the cannabis tax. Trinity County also recently reduced their cannabis tax. The state of California did away with the cultivation tax. Give Mendocino farmers a chance to stay in business. Repeal the cannabis tax.
THANK YOU FOR BRINGING BACK THIS ITEM FOR DISCUSSION! (Our original letter, for the record)
Dear Supervisors,
Below is the letter we planned to send and speak on in public comment, but now that the February GGC mtg is cancelled, we wonder if revising tax structure can be added to the agenda for the March GGC mtg.
Happy New Year of the General Government Committee. We are excited you are here, especially since having served before, there is no learning curve and we can jump right in.
Supervisors Haschak and Mulheren, you are both very aware of the unfair tax structure for cannabis, as you have both sponsored prior legislation on this issue. We appreciate your past efforts. and. knowing the reduction in fees is set to expire at the end of 2026, we need you to act again this year to find further tax relief in future years.
Already In 2026, Humboldt County has "repealed" the Measure S cannabis taxes. It seems they got creative and set the amount of a voter initiated tax to zero dollars. And Trinity County also recently reduced their cannabis tax by 80%. The state itself did away with the cultivation tax a couple years ago, thanks to our own Senator McGuire. And the Governor signed amendments last year that lowered the excise tax at retail. Many municipalities have since restructured, reduced, and repealed taxes.
In Mendocino, the minimum tax true up needs to go away. We should only be taxed on what is actually sold. While some folks lobbied you to scale up, we and many other farms have had to lower our canopy size from 10k to 5k just to stay in business. An entire class of people in this County have gone from self-reliant to public assistance in a very short amount of time.
We barely broke even in 2025 and the top three reasons are because of the excessive fees and tax, the lack of a working supply chain access, and the many cannabis-only barriers as a small farm that do not apply to other agricultural endeavors, at both the State and County level. There are actions the County can take to alleviate pressure on all three of those points, but right now, this request is focused on taxes.
We are now 10 years into adult use laws in California and policy is the main reason it is still not a fair playing field. it's a shame that even after the majority of farms from Phase 1 finally got annual licenses from the State last year, the number of active Mendocino licenses are still dropping because there have been many who can no longer continue, overwhelmed by what we outlined above. You know our story, we have expressed it many times at many government meetings. There are still so many hurdles to success.
We want to make sure the tax issue is on the BOS agenda sometime this year and we are willing to help.
Just let us know what you need.
Thank you for your consideration of this matter,
Laura & Marty Clein