Pubdate: Wed, 25 Aug 2010
Source: Tribune, The (San Luis Obispo, CA)
Copyright: 2010 The Tribune
Contact:  http://www.sanluisobispo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/391
Author: Bob Cuddy

MEDICAL MARIJUANA CLINIC PROPOSED FOR NIPOMO IS SHOT DOWN BY SUPERVISORS

Overwhelming Opposition By The Community And By Supervisors Defeats L.A. 
Man's Application For A Clinic In The South County

A proposal for a medical marijuana clinic in Nipomo fell short Tuesday 
afternoon after a parade of local residents hammered it relentlessly, 
linking those who patronize or hang around such dispensaries to everything 
from murder to burglaries and saying they pose a threat to children.

Applicant Robert Brody of Los Angeles found no support from anyone in the 
community or on the Board of Supervisors as he sought to open his clinic in 
an industrial park at 425-B N. Frontage Road.

Supervisors voted 5-0 against the clinic, leaving the county without one 
despite an ordinance allowing dispensaries.

Marijuana for medical use is designed to help patients with cancer and 
other painful diseases who say marijuana alleviates their pain. They need a 
doctor's prescription.

No such patients testified at Tuesday's 90-minute hearing.

Supervisors shot down Brody's proposal in part because the would-be 
dispensary would have been located close to a gymnastics studio that 
children attend 16 to 20 hours a week.

They also noted continuing confusion and contradictions about state and 
federal laws regarding marijuana.

In addition, supervisors said Brody should have done more community 
outreach, including consultations with law enforcement.

They also said they were moved by the overwhelming community opposition to 
the suggested dispensary. Speaker after speaker testified strongly against it.

One speaker, Rebecca Pruitt, called the clinic "unsafe and unneeded." She 
said the typical person who goes to such a clinics is a male between 18 and 
34, "not people with glaucoma" or the other ill people who it is commonly 
believed use medical marijuana.

Pruitt added that anyone who wants medical marijuana can get it in San Luis 
Obispo County and can grow his or her own limited number of plants.

Others said just about anyone can get a doctor's prescription allowing the 
drug to be dispensed. The specter of crime was uppermost in many people's 
minds.

"There are no murders or robberies at medical marijuana clinics in Nipomo," 
said Ed Eby of the Nipomo Community Services District, "because there are 
no medical marijuana clinics in Nipomo. Let's keep it that way."

Various speakers, including Sheriff Pat Hedges, offered conflicting 
testimony on whether such clinics are "crime magnets," as Eby characterized 
them. Hedges could not cite a study.

But Brody said it is safer to dispense the controlled substance through a 
clinic such as his than to stick with the current system. He said the whole 
idea is to give safe access to people suffering from diseases who need 
medical marijuana to ease their symptoms.

Brody likened current opposition to marijuana to alcohol being outlawed 
during Prohibition. He noted that San Luis Obispo County, with its 
multimillion dollar wine tourism industry, wouldn't be so prosperous had 
Prohibition stuck.

Supervisor Bruce Gibson said he saw no evidence that clinics are a magnet 
for crime. He added, however, that he worried about the nearby gymnastics 
studio.

Gibson said he supports the medical use of marijuana, "in places that are 
appropriate." However, San Luis Obispo County has yet to find such a place.

The Sheriff's Department opposes this particular plan, as did the South 
County Advisory Council.

The Planning Commission voted 3-2 against the clinic in May. Commissioner 
Anne Wyatt, who was on the short end of that vote, said what the county is 
"seeing is a de facto moratorium on any of these businesses. That is the 
bigger issue. It's sad for people who are in need of this."
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