(B) The sale or commercial activity authorized herein, when outside the commercial and regulatory system established herein. (3) Removes "marijuana," "THC," and "CBD," explicitly or by inference as a controlled substance, from Health and Safety Code section 11054. (4) This Act does not control, repeal, modify, or change statutes pertaining to: (A) Operating a motor vehicle; (B) Using marijuana or being impaired while in the workplace or in public; (C) Medical marijuana statutes as set forth in Proposition 215 (H&S11362.5) and its progeny. (5) For persons under 21 years of age it is an infraction punishable by a fine up to $2,500.00, for any one of the following: (A) Possession of over one ounce of marijuana. (B) Cultivation of marijuana. (C) Gifting, sharing, distributing, sales, storage, transporting over one ounce of marijuana. (D) Possession of one ounce or less of marijuana, in this class shall be an infraction with a $100 fine. (6) This Act enjoins the search, arrest, prosecution, property seizure, asset forfeiture, eradication costs, and/or any criminal or civil penalty, or sanction, for activity authorized herein. (7) No later than February 1, 2013, the state Alcohol Beverage Control Board shall adopt regulations and procedures, provide and accept forms for the implementation of commercial activity under this Act. Such regulations shall not prohibit marijuana farming, the operation of marijuana establishments or point of sale outlets, either expressly or through regulations that make their operation different than wine or beer regulations and fees, or unreasonably impracticable. Should the Alcohol Beverage Control Board fail to have procedures in effect by this date, it shall use forms presently used for wine and beer, and replace the words wine, beer, alcohol, with the word marijuana, and accept and process those forms within sixty days of submission or approval is automatic. Localities may not adopt higher or extra fees, limits, site plans, zoning, regulations or Page 2 of 5