Pubdate: Mon, 06 Feb 2012
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
Copyright: 2012 The Sacramento Bee
Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/0n4cG7L1
Website: http://www.sacbee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376
Author: Peter Hecht

CALIFORNIA POT INDUSTRY'S NEXT MOVE: BALLOT INITIATIVE FOR STATE REGULATION

A proposed ballot initiative aimed for the November elections begs a
key question looming over California's medical marijuana industry: Can
stricter state regulation keep the federal government from shutting it
down?

Dispensaries, medical marijuana growers and a powerful union local are
rallying behind an initiative that would regulate California's $1.5
billion pot trade.

They predict they will be able to raise $2 million from medical
marijuana businesses and drug policy groups to qualify the measure for
the November ballot. A drive to gather a required half-million valid
voter signatures could begin this week after Attorney General Kamala
Harris completes a legal summary and petitions are certified by
Secretary of State Debra Bowen.

California's medical marijuana economy is mostly governed by local
governments, often with conflicting rules. The proposed initiative,
the "Medical Marijuana Regulation, Control and Taxation Act," would
largely put the state in charge.

It would establish a medical marijuana enforcement bureau in the
Department of Consumer Affairs. A commission  with majority
representation from the medical cannabis community  would oversee the
enforcement bureau, license dispensaries and marijuana cultivators,
and set standards for the pot trade.

The effort is a political compromise by wary factions.

The "Emerald Growers Association" from the Humboldt and Mendocino
counties pot country signed on after initiative backers rejected a
model based on the dispensary-run pot growing centers used in
Colorado. The group wanted assurances that rural outdoor pot
cultivators wouldn't be cut out of the market by urban indoor growers.

The United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 5, which two years
ago backed the Proposition 19 effort to legalize marijuana for
recreational use, signed on to the new initiative after deciding it
was the best option to protect union jobs in the pot industry.

The effort also includes Americans for Safe Access, an Oakland-based
advocacy group for medical cannabis users that stayed out of the
Proposition 19 fight.

After a yearlong effort to update California's medical marijuana
rules, they came together in the wake of a sweeping federal crackdown
on marijuana dispensaries that includes criminal prosecutions and
property seizures.

Local zoning enforcement efforts and the looming threat of federal
action have closed 100 marijuana dispensaries in Sacramento County.
Since October, the number of dispensaries statewide has fallen from
1,200 to 900.

"We lost half of our membership in California," said Dan Rush, whose
United Food & Commercial Workers Local 5 has unionized more than 800
medical marijuana workers.

The state's four U.S. attorneys say they don't take issue with the
1996 California law permitting sale and use of marijuana for medical
needs. But they assail California's loosely defined rules allowing
medical pot users to share marijuana in nonprofit networks. They say
the industry has been "hijacked by profiteers" running pot stores that
are likely illegal under both state and federal law.

"The crackdown motivated a lot of people to believe we really needed
to clarify state law," said Dale Gieringer, state director for the
National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws. "The situation has
been vague and chaotic. The feds were using that as an excuse to come
in and trample all around."

'Unregulated free-for-all'

Sacramento U.S. Attorney Benjamin Wagner said in October that federal
authorities were taking action as pot stores flourished in California
in "a virtually unregulated free-for-all." But federal authorities
have not spelled out what they will tolerate.

Advocates say they hope formal oversight would be an elixir against
federal intervention, pointing to Colorado.

Until recently, Colorado avoided friction over its medical pot market,
which unlike California's is for-profit and heavily regulated. That
state requires video surveillance of marijuana transactions and
shipments, state licensing of marijuana workers and registration of
medical pot users.

None of that is included in the proposed California initiative.
Backers of the measure, which could open the door to for-profit
marijuana sales in California, say they want to leave many details for
the Legislature and medical cannabis commission to decide.

The initiative would impose a 2.5 percent tax and licensing fees on
medical marijuana businesses to fund state regulation. It would
require cities and counties to allow one marijuana store for each
50,000 residents and prevent local governments from banning
dispensaries without voter approval.

The enforcement bureau would be overseen by a commission with 21
members, 14 of them from the medical marijuana community. They are to
include four medical cannabis users and advocates, two marijuana
policy specialists, one researcher, one medical marijuana union member
and six people with experience in dispensaries, cannabis cultivation
or lab testing.

"What this is about is recognizing that folks who understand the
industry are best at understanding how to regulate the industry," said
Dale Sky Jones, chancellor of Oaksterdam University, a marijuana
trades school in Oakland.

The commission, as described, also would include a doctor, a nurse and
police, tax and health officials. Still, some law enforcement groups
are dubious over its bent.

"To say this board will be regulating marijuana is like saying the
tobacco industry will form a commission to look at health issues
involving cigarette smoking," said John Lovell, a lobbyist for
California police chiefs and narcotics officers. "It's just silly."

Legislators urged to act

The measure could appear on the same ballot as two unrelated state
measures, being circulated for signatures, to legalize marijuana
regardless of medical need.

It comes as top state officials, including Attorney General Harris,
say something needs to be done to clarify California's hazy pot rules.

In a letter to state Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg and
Assembly Speaker John A. Perez, Harris urged passage of laws offering
"real solutions, not half measures" on how "individuals may cultivate
and obtain physician-recommended marijuana."

Steinberg said he would support legislation to protect medical pot
users and address the concerns of federal prosecutors. But he asked,
"Can we satisfy them? How far can we go to satisfy them?"

Even in Colorado, the federal government's stance is now less clear.
Last month, Colorado U.S. Attorney John Walsh threatened to seize the
properties of 23 marijuana stores that operate within 1,000 feet of
schools.

University of Denver law professor Sam Kamin said the federal actions
are likely a surgical strike, not a broad assault. But he said "if the
feds don't respect" Colorado's regulatory program, "they're not going
to respect the watered-down version that we see (in the measure
proposed) in California."

Democratic Assemblyman Tom Ammiano said he met recently with his
region's top U.S. prosecutor, Melinda Haag of San Francisco. He said
she "wasn't very encouraging" that an initiative  or legislation 
could inoculate California's pot industry against federal actions.

But Ammiano said California must move ahead regardless to regulate
medical marijuana. He said voter support or favorable polls for an
initiative "may give legislators who are tepid about this a little
more assurance." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.