Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jan 2012
Source: Kent Reporter (WA)
Copyright: 2012 Sound Publishing
Contact:  http://www.pnwlocalnews.com/south_king/ken/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5026
Author: Dennis Box, Kent Reporter Regional Editor

KENT CITY COUNCIL VOTES 4-3 TO PASS NEW MORATORIUM ON MEDICAL
MARIJUANA OPERATIONS

The first couple of votes for the 2012 Kent City Council Tuesday 
night turned into a contentious, legal maze over medical 
marijuana   welcome to the council.

With new members Dana Ralph and Bill Boyce taking their positions on 
the dais, the council again considered zoning regulation for medical 
marijuana collective gardens and extending the moratorium on all 
medical marijuana operations.

The zoning measure failed 4-3 with Boyce, Ralph, Les Thomas and 
Deborah Ranniger voting no. Elizabeth Albertson, Jamie Perry and 
Council President Dennis Higgins voted in favor of zoning ordinance 
for medical marijuana collective gardens.

An emergency ordinance was considered that would have extended the 
current moratorium for six months without a gap when the previous 
six-month moratorium lapsed Thursday, Jan. 5.

The emergency measure needed a five-vote super majority, which failed 
with Albertson, Perry and Higgins voting no.

The council finally decided on a 4-3 vote to put a new six-month 
moratorium in place that takes effect five days after it is published 
by the city. It is expected there will be a gap of about one week 
between the new measure taking effect and the lapsing of the previous 
moratorium.

Boyce, Ralph, Thomas and Ranniger voted for the new moratorium.

The zoning measure also failed to pass when the previous council 
considered it Dec. 12. The zoning regulation had passed out of the 
Economic and Community Development Committee on a 2-1 vote with Perry 
and Albertson voting yes and Ranniger no.

The battle lines over the issue that came to the surface in December 
were much the same Tuesday.

"I have kids and I don't recommend to them they go out and smoke 
marijuana," Higgins said. "I do think we have an obligation, however, 
as a city of 118,000 people, to the people that live in our city that 
legitimately need access to medical marijuana.... I think we need to 
behave like a big city and we need to establish rules around this."

On the other side of the aisle, Thomas disagreed.

"Until the federal government changes this to a legal substance, I 
still consider this an illegal substance," Thomas said.

Thomas drew a parallel stating "Prostitution is illegal. We all know 
that. So are we going to zone it up on Highway 99 as a zone that can 
allow that to happen? I don't think so. Until marijuana is made a 
legal drug we shouldn't zone something that is illegal."

Albertson supported the zoning and stated, "When I raised my right 
hand I vowed to do what was right for the citizens of the community 
and what they are asking me to do. What they have asked me to do is 
create an access point for those people who under state law have a 
letter from their doctor that states they have a medical condition 
that allows them to use medical cannabis for the treatment of that condition."

Perry said she wanted to "dispel the idea we are suddenly trying to 
make legal something that is illegal. That's not what we are doing 
and this is not akin to prostitution. The state has not said 
prostitution is legal. They have said collective gardens are. We have 
to deal with that reality."

Ralph said, "I believe the city is not in a position or should not 
take positions to zone anything that is illegal under federal law. 
Once federal law is clarified and makes this substance legal, at that 
point I believe we have a responsibility to zone for it.... At this 
point in time it is against the law and I stood up there tonight and 
raised my right hand and promised to uphold the constitution of the 
state and the laws of the federal government."

During the discussion of the moratorium, Albertson and Perry both 
stated they would not support another moratorium if there was no 
direction from the council members on the zoning ordinance.

The temperature of the discussion raised considerably as Albertson 
said if the members were voting against the zoning because of the 
federal law the members were essentially "banning it (medical 
marijuana) totally," and that was a "cop out."

She continued stating, "I would be embarrassed to stand between 
people and their doctor's recommendation that they use medical 
cannabis for their illness. This to me is an issue of humanity and to 
do anything less is heartless."

Ralph countered stating, "I respectfully have to take exception to 
the fact that this makes me heartless. I am not standing between 
anyone and their medicine that they and their doctor choose them to 
have. I just do not believe the city is in a position to zone for 
something that is against the law."

Ralph said she would support the extenuation of the moratorium to 
give the current council time to consider the issue.

One of the issues outlined by the staff was without a moratorium or 
zoning in place, collective gardens could open in most areas of the city.

Philip Dawdy, who worked with the Washington Cannabis Association 
during the 2011 legislative session, said he was concerned about the 
gap between the new moratorium taking effect and the end of the 
measure passed in July.

"It is entirely possible someone could open (a medical marijuana 
facility)," Dawdy said. "I am concerned about the gap. You never can 
tell what will happen. We want this to be easy, smooth and orderly, 
not random and disorderly."

Dawdy said legislation on medical marijuana is being drawn up in 
Olympia that will likely be considered during the 2012 session.

A bill was passed during the 2011 session, but Gov. Chris Gregoire 
vetoed 36 of 58 sections, leaving a confusing legal landscape for 
cities to navigate.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D