Pubdate: Fri, 14 Sep 2012
Source: Fort Collins Coloradoan (CO)
Copyright: 2012 The Fort Collins Coloradoan
Contact: http://www.coloradoan.com/customerservice/contactus.html
Website: http://www.coloradoan.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1580
Author: Patrick Malone

CITIZENS DISENGAGED, DIVIDED ON MUNICIPAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARY QUESTION

Fort Collins voters will decide in November whether to repeal the ban 
on medical marijuana dispensaries imposed by voters in last year's election.

Supporters of Question 301, including Kirk Scramstad, a former 
dispensary owner who helped organize the citizen initiative seeking 
to repeal the ban, contend it would provide a regulated environment 
that keeps marijuana in the hands of people who can legally use it to 
treat medical conditions.

The initiative would allow dispensaries to reopen and sell marijuana 
in assorted forms to patients with medical marijuana licenses 
approved by doctors and issued by the state. But it would impose 
certain restrictions. Advertising via sign spinners would be curbed 
and the number of dispensaries would be capped at one per 500 
registered medical marijuana patients.

Larimer County ranks seventh out of 64 Colorado counties with 5,016 
registered medical marijuana patients, according to the Colorado 
Department of Public Health and Environment.

Boundaries prohibiting dispensaries within 1,000 feet of schools and 
playgrounds and within 500 feet of churches, child-care centers and 
recreation sites would be unchanged by Question 301.

Opponents of repealing the ban, including former Fort Collins Mayor 
Ray Martinez, argue that allowing dispensaries opens the door to 
marijuana sliding into the black market and potentially into the 
hands of children.

Martinez spearheads Concerned Fort Collins Citizens, which ran last 
year's initiative to ban dispensaries and has registered as a 
committee opposing Question 301. He has said that the medical merits 
of marijuana are dubious.

A random sampling of Fort Collins voters recently at Old Town Square 
revealed few are very engaged in the question of allowing 
dispensaries, and those who have an opinion about it are divided.

"I would favor it," Alex Kipp said. "Why should people who have 
licenses to use medical marijuana drive all the way to Longmont or 
Denver to get it? Keep it local."

Erica Ridnour shared the concern for medical marijuana patients 
traveling and touted the medical benefits of marijuana.

"My brother has a license," she said. "He's in pain, and it helps 
him. He doesn't live here, but I think about how hard it would be for 
him to travel and get it, so I'm all for having dispensaries locally."

Nancy Burke said she believes insufficient guardrails on dispensaries 
increase the availability of marijuana to illicit users.

"It was disastrous the other way," she said. "People were getting it 
under the radar. I don't see the benefit of allowing dispensaries here."

John Gray considers himself undecided on the dispensary question.

"It's not something I follow all that closely, so I have mixed 
feelings on it," he said. "I'm not for anything that encourages drug 
problems. On the other hand, I don't discount that there is some 
medical benefit. If they will be properly regulated, that's legit. If 
it's just a way around drugs being illegal, I'm not so hot for it."

[sidebar]

About the ordinance

* A yes vote supports allowing medical marijuana dispensaries in Fort Collins.

* A no vote supports the existing ban on medical marijuana 
dispensaries operating within Fort Collins. Ballot measure language:

INITIATED QUESTION 301

An ordinance repealing certain provisions of the City Code that 
presently prohibit the operation of medical marijuana businesses in 
the City and replacing those provisions with rules and regulations 
governing the licensing, number, location and operation of such businesses.

_ FOR THE ORDINANCE _ AGAINST THE ORDINANCE
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