Pubdate: Mon, 14 Jun 2010
Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO)
Copyright: 2010 The Daily Camera.
Contact:  http://www.dailycamera.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103
Author: John Aguilar
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries

SUPERIOR PASSES BOULDER COUNTY'S FIRST MEDICAL POT DISPENSARY BAN

Vote comes despite planning commission's advice to  regulate the businesses

Town leaders in Superior passed an ordinance Monday evening 
prohibiting any medical-marijuana facility from setting up shop in 
town, becoming the first municipality in Boulder County to ban the 
dispensaries outright.

Trustees voted 6-to-0 in favor of the ban, which will take effect in 
about a month. Trustee Debra Williams was absent.

Superior appears to be the state's second town or city to permanently 
ban medical marijuana dispensaries since the Colorado Legislature 
passed a law last month regulating the industry and allowing 
municipalities to outlaw the facilities. Vail was the first to enact 
a ban on June 1.

Mayor Andrew Muckle said Superior, which doesn't have any 
dispensaries currently in operation, could always revisit the issue 
later if it's apparent that residents want them.

"If we permit something, it's very difficult to go back," he said.

Medical marijuana advocates reacted immediately to Superior's decision.

"It's my impression that the leaders of Superior are passing poor 
public policy," said Brian Vicente, executive director of Sensible 
Colorado. "I think it's going to hurt the sickest members of their community."

He said the town is inviting "costly litigation" from those who 
believe that the state's decision to allow towns and cities to ban 
dispensaries is unconstitutional.

A decade ago, Colorado voters passed Amendment 20, which allows 
people with debilitating medical conditions to consume marijuana. The 
amendment to the state constitution stipulated that caregivers could 
provide medicinal pot to patients but didn't speak to the legality of 
dispensaries, which blossomed statewide this year after the Obama 
administration said it wouldn't use federal law to pursue dispensary owners.

It is estimated there are now 1,100 dispensaries statewide and about 
half are not expected to survive the stricter regulations at the 
state level. Gov. Bill Ritter signed the legislation into law last week.

"Patients have the right to access medicine at a storefront just like 
anyone else trying get medicine," Vicente said, lambasting Superior's 
vote. "It's like banning pharmacies."

With two dispensaries open across U.S. 36 in Louisville, Mayor Muckle 
said, Superior's ban is hardly restricting residents' abilities to 
obtain medical marijuana.

Superior has long been aggressive in its opposition to dispensaries, 
being the first in the state to ban them last fall. The town 
rescinded the ban a few months later after determining that it might 
be on shaky legal ground without clear regulations from the state. It 
imposed a moratorium instead.

Monday's vote was in sharp contrast to a decision last month by the 
town's planning commission to oppose a ban. The commission felt that 
dispensaries should be permitted and regulated in Superior because 
they are already allowed under state law.

"I would just have to disagree with them on this issue," said Trustee 
Elia Gourgouris, noting that several of his constituents had 
contacted him urging him to vote for the ban.

No members of the public spoke out on the issue Monday evening.

Muckle seemed to recognize the import of the board's vote, 
acknowledging that Superior is once again on the "cutting edge" of the issue.

A number of other Colorado municipalities will likely follow in 
Superior's footsteps. Greenwood Village is in the process of 
approving a dispensary ban. Aurora plans to put the issue of a ban up 
to a vote of its residents in November.

Several town and cities in Boulder County -- including Louisville, 
Lafayette, Erie, and Longmont -- have put in place moratoriums on new 
dispensaries and are in the midst of trying to figure out what kind 
of regulations to pass.

It's too soon to say whether any of them are planning to introduce 
their own bans.

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[sidebar]

Medical marijuana regulations in Boulder County

Boulder: Dispensaries must be licensed by the city and are prohibited 
from operating within 500 feet of a school or day-care center. No 
marijuana business can operate in areas that have three or more other 
marijuana businesses within 500 feet.

Longmont: Moratorium on new dispensaries effective until June 30, 2011.

Erie: Moratorium on new dispensaries effective until Oct. 6.

Louisville: Moratorium on new dispensaries effective until Aug. 15; 
likely to be extended.

Lafayette: Moratorium on new dispensaries effective until Aug. 3; 
likely to be extended.

Lyons: Moratorium on new dispensaries effective until Sept. 10.

Nederland: None.

Boulder County: Dispensaries allowed only in areas zoned as 
transitional, commercial, light industrial and general industrial. No 
marijuana business allowed within 1,000 feet of child-care 
facilities, schools, or drug and alcohol treatment centers. Medical 
marijuana centers are also banned within 500 feet of one another.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom