Pubdate: Sat, 30 Apr 2005
Source: Oakland Tribune, The (CA)
Copyright: 2005 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.oaklandtribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314
Author: Josh Richman, Staff Writer
Cited: Americans for Safe Access http://www.safeaccessnow.org/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

MORATORIUMS, LAWSUIT MARK MARIJUANA DEBATE

A lawsuit filed last week against a Central Valley city signals the growing 
concern of medical marijuana advocates over a municipal backlash against 
cannabis clubs up and down the state.

Oakland-based Americans for Safe Access sued Fresno on Monday for enacting 
a ban on medical marijuana dispensaries, which the group says violates 
California laws entitling patients and caregivers to the medicinal herb.

But almost nine years after Golden State voters approved a 
compassionate-use law, what that law and a 2003 implementation law allow 
remain somewhat vague. Many cities, experiencing or fearing an explosion of 
dispensaries, recently have enacted moratoriums on any new ones to allow 
time to develop regulations.

"The last six months have shown a big increase in people feeling more 
courageous to try to open a local dispensary, and their inquiries to their 
cities (are) what has spurred a lot of these responses," said Americans for 
Safe Access organizer Hilary McQuie. "It became understood as the process, 
even though it's not necessary to have a moratorium just to develop 
regulations."

What's not permissible, she said, is an outright ban.

"It's not appropriate, nor is it legal, to disallow dispensaries from 
operating in that locality," McQuie said.

Neither California's Proposition 25 of 1996, nor a 2003 law creating a 
photo-identification system for patients and caregivers, clearly addresses 
where and how patients and caregivers are to procure marijuana for medical 
use. The 2003 law does provide that card-carrying patients who associate 
"in order collectively or cooperatively to cultivate marijuana for medical 
purposes" aren't subject to criminal punishment.

Fresno's City Council in October passed an ordinance banning medical 
marijuana dispensaries that serve three or more patients; the city's police 
chief advised the council to pass it as a health and safety issue. A Fresno 
city spokesman didn't return a call Friday seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Meanwhile, dozens of California cities have put the brakes on any new 
dispensaries while they mull regulations. Rohnert Park on Tuesday became 
the latest, enacting a 45-day moratorium.

With cities and counties scrambling to develop their own dispensary 
policies, California seems poised to become a regulatory patchwork.

Not a problem, McQuie said: "It's OK for local areas to have varying 
regulations around dispensaries just like local governments have zoning for 
other types of businesses."

Cities should look for an already-proven model, and McQuie said Oakland 
fits the bill. It's not perfect, she said -- medical marijuana advocates 
still believe the city needs more than four clubs, with longer hours and 
fewer restrictions.

But a city report issued in early April found that "during their first 
seven months of operation, the permitted cannabis dispensaries have shown 
that, in general, they can function without creating a nuisance in the 
neighborhood or draining police resources." It also found "they likely 
increase the sales of other businesses in the neighborhood."

Other cities should put that in their pipes and smoke it, McQuie suggested, 
and "take courage from Oakland's example."

What California cities ought not to be doing is awaiting a U.S. Supreme 
Court decision in a case brought by patients Angel Raich of Oakland and 
Diane Monson of Oroville. That case deals only with Congress' authority to 
restrict wholly intrastate medical use of marijuana, and no matter how the 
court rules, California's laws will stand, McQuie said.

"The outcome is irrelevant to dispensaries," she said. "Our fear is that 
local law enforcement won't understand that they're supposed to be 
following California law when there's a conflict between California and 
federal laws." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake