Pubdate: Fri, 09 Apr 2010
Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA)
Webpage:
Copyright: 2010 The Desert Sun
Contact: http://local2.thedesertsun.com/mailer/opinionwrap.php
Website: http://www.mydesert.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112
Note: Does not accept LTEs from outside circulation area.
Author: Marcel Honore
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries

CANNAHELP GETS TO KEEP PERMIT

City Council Votes to Allow a Third Medical Marijuana Dispensary to Open

CannaHelp will not lose its permit to serve valley medical marijuana 
patients -- and Palm Springs will get an additional city-approved 
medical marijuana dispensary.

The City Council opted with a 3-2 vote Wednesday not to suspend 
CannaHelp's permit to operate at 505 Industrial Place -- and to take 
steps to allow a third permitted dispensary. CannaHelp owner Stacy 
Hochanadel will have to report to council in May on progress to bring 
the dispensary into compliance with the building code.

Councilmen Chris Mills and Lee Weigel dissented -- Mills only because 
he could not support a third permitted medical marijuana facility, he 
said later. Hochanadel was visibly relieved after the council's vote. 
"I was at a point where I thought we could have lost it all for our 
patients," he said.

Police, fire and code officials locked down and red-tagged 
CannaHelp's building on March 4 -- days before the dispensary was to 
open, after they found health and safety hazards, and hundreds of 
marijuana plants already growing.

The inspectors were stunned when they encountered CannaHelp's 
ambitious, 8,000-square-foot indoor growing operation already under 
way -- involving more than 100 lights, meant to simulate sunlight, 
about 46 tons of air-conditioning equipment, a system for 3,600 
gallons of water per week and electrical changes, Hochanadel said Monday.

"I understand and agree I took some improper steps in my tenant 
improvement process," Hochanadel told the council Wednesday, adding 
that he's working diligently with his architect, James Cioffi, to 
submit plans with the necessary changes to CannaHelp's location.

Councilwoman Ginny Foat said she was upset with Hochanadel for 
putting the building's other tenants in danger and temporarily out of 
business. "I'm saying this out of anger because I'm one of his no. 1 
supporters," Foat said. "These were not little mistakes. He didn't 
paint it the wrong color. He endangered people who were in the building."

Several on council said CannaHelp should be treated like any other 
business facing the same building code issues.

Hochanadel said after the meeting that he's aiming to open CannaHelp 
by May 14, provided the planning approval process goes smoothly. 
Representatives for the city's other approved dispensary, Desert 
Organic Solutions Collective, said they aim to open next month.

It was not clear how quickly a third permitted city dispensary would 
be approved, but City Attorney Doug Holland said the process would 
not affect progress on the other two. As of last month, four other 
dispensaries were operating in defiance of Palm Springs' city ordinance.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom