Pubdate: Thu, 22 Sep 2011
Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Copyright: 2011 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsreview.com/chico/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/559
Author: Robert Speer
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries

REDDING TAKES ON MEDICAL CANNABIS

It Has 16 Dispensaries, While Chico Has None. Why?

During the several public hearings Chico's City Council held as it 
tried to craft an ordinance governing medical-cannabis dispensaries, 
one name came up repeatedly: Redding.

The two towns are the same size, have similar demographics and are 
both located in what has long been prime pot-growing country. And 
yet, as Chico medical-cannabis advocates have never tired of telling 
the council, Redding has taken a much different tack when it comes to 
regulating dispensaries.

Whereas Redding has 16 fully regulated, licensed and 
sales-tax-collecting dispensaries within city limits, Chico has no 
ordinance and no dispensaries. That means, among other things, that 
legitimate medical-cannabis patients in Chico, unlike their 
counterparts in Redding, have no safe and legal local access to their 
medicine other than to grow their own. (The one operating dispensary 
nearby, North Valley Holistic Health, is outside city limits on Highway 32.)

How did Redding end up with 16 dispensaries? And what impact have 
those dispensaries had on the community? Have residents accepted 
them, or is the relationship troubled? What cautionary lessons does 
Redding provide as Chico continues to try to write a medical-cannabis 
ordinance? And do city officials fear prosecution by the U.S. 
attorney's office, as Chico officials do? We decided to find out.

It all began in early 2009, when U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder 
announced that henceforth his agency would no longer prosecute 
medical-marijuana dispensaries in states where they were legal, even 
though federal law held marijuana to be illegal.

In Redding, 35 dispensaries popped up almost overnight, explained 
Chief of Police Peter Hansen during a recent phone interview.

Redding officials realized they could do one of two things: either 
try to stamp out all those businesses, or regulate and control them 
in accordance with state law.

"We looked at the situation and realized that we didn't have any 
power to shut them down," explained City Attorney Rick Duvernay, also 
reached by phone. "It was too late [to pass] a moratorium, and there 
was no way to shut down a business other than to say it was a public 
nuisance, which was not the case here."

Contrast that with Chico, where District Attorney Mike Ramsey 
orchestrated pre-emptive raids on eight dispensaries in the area and 
shut them down. (For an update on the raids, see Meredith J. Graham's 
story, "Where are they now?" on page 20.)

Subsequently the City Council developed an ordinance regulating both 
residential growing and dispensaries. But when the U.S. attorney in 
Sacramento, Benjamin Wagner, sent city officials a letter threatening 
to prosecute them for conspiracy to commit a federal crime, they 
quickly repealed the dispensaries part of the ordinance.

In Redding, city officials saw that there was a moral dimension to 
the issue, Hansen said. They recognized that California voters had 
approved Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, in order 
to provide legitimate patients with safe access. Whatever else city 
officials thought of the initiative, that was at its core.

So the City Council decided to provide safe access. Hearings were 
held. Relevant laws were studied. Opinions were brandished and 
debated. And when it was over Redding had regulated both residential 
gardens and collectively run dispensaries.

The rules on dispensaries are strict: Background checks are run on 
all employees. Doctor's recommendations must include purchase limits. 
All recommendations must be verified. Members can belong to only one 
collective. No growing is allowed on premises (except clones). No 
dispensaries close to schools, libraries, residences or any places 
where kids are found.

Hansen does the permitting, and is given a fair amount of leeway to 
determine who's OK and who's not.

"I just don't get that-why we have to report to the Police 
Department," complained Ted Lidie, a manager at MediCali Collective, 
a storefront operation in a commercial area on Redding's busy Churn 
Creek Road. "With other businesses there's no police involvement."

At the same time, Lidie acknowledged that there had been a spate of 
strong-armed robberies at dispensaries recently, requiring a police 
response-though he was quick to point out that his shop had never been robbed.

"We have a really good security system," he explained, "with external 
alarms and a camera setup. It's required by the [medical-cannabis] ordinance."

The MediCali Collective is neat and clean but hardly resembles a 
professional medical office. The floors are concrete, and the wall 
decorations-blown-up images of marijuana buds, a floor-to-ceiling 
painting of Bob Marley with a spliff between his lips-speak to 
recreational users, not sick people.

After two years in business, the collective has about 4,000 members 
and six employees. Overall community response has been less than 
favorable. "Most of the community doesn't like us," Lidie said. 
"We're way more hated than adult bookstores"-though not, of course, 
by the collective's customers.

Not too long ago the Redding Police Department did a survey of the 
dispensaries to find out how many members they had. The answer was 
shocking: 40,000.

What the figure clearly meant, Hansen said, was that many people were 
illegally joining multiple collectives. The collectives, he said, are 
obeying the law, but the so-called "patients" are not.

Hansen acknowledged that his department lacked the resources to do 
much about it, since each dispensary keeps its own data. "It's very, 
very difficult for us to monitor these places," he said.

Hansen and Duvernay both said that, when it comes to medical 
cannabis, state law has left cities "to their own devices," in 
Duvernay's words. Hansen was blunt: "Proposition 215 is the worst 
piece of legislation ever to hit California," he stated.

Both men were aware of the letter U.S. Attorney Wagner sent Chico 
city officials. Neither thought the threat was serious, and Hansen 
called it "ridiculous."

The feds have been no more consistent than the state, they said. 
First Attorney General Holder said he was going to take a hands-off 
approach, then Wagner came along two years later and threatened 
prosecution. And yet when Hansen invited Wagner to send a similar 
letter to Redding, Wagner declined.

"If they came here and seized one dispensary landlord's property," 
Hansen said, "I'm sure the rest would shut down pretty quickly." But 
it's not going to happen, he said.

The community's response to medical marijuana was "mixed at first," 
Hansen said, "but now there's a lot of backlash." Interestingly, most 
complaints involve backyard gardens, not the dispensaries. But 
there's a widespread feeling that the increased visibility of 
marijuana is leading to the degradation of the community, that 
Redding "is developing a reputation as a place to get and grow dope."

But the reality, he continued, "is that we voted for this."

For his part, Duvernay is grateful that the city is no longer arguing 
over a medical-cannabis ordinance. "For better or worse," he said, 
"we took a course of action."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom