Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jan 2011
Source: North County Times (Escondido, CA)
Copyright: 2011 North County Times
Contact: http://www.nctimes.com/app/forms/letters/index.php
Website: http://www.nctimes.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080
Author: Chris Nichols

MORE MEDICAL POT RULES UP FOR COUNTY VOTE

County Considers $11k Fee for Pot Shops

Want to open a medical pot shop in San Diego County's
backcountry?

Be prepared to pay more than $11,000 a year for Sheriff's Department
services - probably the highest annual law enforcement fee the
county charges any type of business, according to a top department
official.

And be ready for a criminal background check by the federal
government.

The Board of Supervisors is expected on Tuesday to approve those
add-ons to the county's medical marijuana dispensary law passed last
summer, a measure that already was considered restrictive because of
its zoning limits.

California voters in 1996 approved the use of marijuana for medicinal
purposes.

Local governments ever since have struggled with how to govern the
sale of medical pot, given the lack of rules in the voter initiative
and the federal government's unwavering position that marijuana is
illegal, no matter the purpose.

County officials said the new measures up for a vote on Tuesday are
intended to recover county costs and ensure the public's safety.

Assistant Sheriff Ed Prendergast said the $11,017 annual fee figure is
the Sheriff's Department's "best estimate" of what it must charge
dispensaries to recover its cost to process a dispensary's
application, check the applicant's background and inspect the shop and
respond to neighbors' complaints at the business.

He said he could not think of a higher yearly fee the department
charges any business for its services.

The assistant sheriff said the department could not immediately
provide the amount it charges other businesses it regulates, such as
massage parlors and firearm distributors.

Eugene Davidovich, chairman of the board of the San Diego Chapter of
Americans for Safe Access Advisory, said the proposals are another
attempt to stifle access to medical pot, not regulate it.

"There is no other business in California, period, that has to go
under this kind of scrutiny," he said.

He added that the Sheriff's Department charges other businesses that
it regulates roughly 10 percent of what it is proposing to charge
medical pot dispensaries.

Prendergast could not immediately say whether that was
accurate.

"It doesn't make any sense what's going on here," Davidovich said. "It
points toward a bias and an agenda. It doesn't point toward
regulating, it points toward eradicating."

Prendergast said the county was "absolutely not" trying to eliminate
all medical marijuana shops.

"When you're dealing with marijuana, there's a high potential for
abuse," he said. "We've got to make sure that the multibillion-dollar
marijuana industry doesn't corrupt our medical marijuana community."

In September 2009, local law enforcement helped federal authorities
shut down 14 medical pot dispensaries and arrested more than 30 people
from Vista to San Marcos to San Diego.

They said the action was spurred by neighbors' complaints about noise
and vandalism generated by the dispensaries.

At the time, San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said
the dispensaries acted as for-profit businesses and sold to customers
who were not members of their cooperatives, both of which are
violations of state law.

The county dispensary law, enacted in 2010, limits the shops to
industrial zones, requires they have a licensed security guard, video
monitoring, precise records of all transactions, including the names
of marijuana suppliers and their addresses; and bans the sale of any
marijuana-laced food or drinks.

Davidovich said only a handful of parcels in the backcountry would
qualify under the rules and that none is available for lease or sale,
he said.

In a brief report to the supervisors regarding Tuesday's vote, the
county's top cop and top executive, Sheriff Bill Gore and Chief
Administrative Officer Walt Ekard, respectively, recommended the
annual fee and a fingerprint requirement for dispensary license applicants.

Applicants would need to receive clearance from the Federal Bureau of
Investigations to obtain a dispensary license.

Davidovich said the handful of medical pot dispensaries that had
operated in North County closed after the 2009 raids.

Some dispensaries continue to operate in the city of San Diego despite
that jurisdiction's efforts to restrict them, he said.

Adding more rules to the county's medical pot dispensary laws will
lead more patients to the black market, he predicted.

"That's who it hurts the most," Davidovich said. "These restrictions
go against the intent of the (state) law, of helping the sick and dying."  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake