Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jun 2013
Source: Jackson Citizen Patriot (MI)
Copyright: 2013 Jackson Citizen Patriot
Contact: http://www.mlive.com/mailforms/jacitpat/letters/index.ssf
Website: http://www.mlive.com/jackson/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1190
Author: Will Forgrave

MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW PASSED BY JACKSON CITY COUNCIL PROHIBITS 
DISPENSARIES, ALLOWS FOR HOME USE

JACKSON, MI - Jackson residents can again grow and use medical
marijuana legally within the city - as long as they do so within their
homes, and only 20 percent of their homes at that.

Jackson City Council members approved a new medical marijuana
ordinance Tuesday, June 11, that allows for the growing and use of
medical marijuana in only the primary residence of the qualifying
patient or caregiver.

Under the ordinance, not more than 20 percent of the floor area in a
home can be used for "medical marijuana home use."

Council members voted in favor of the ordinance after voting to repeal
the city's temporary medical marijuana moratorium, which they extended
for six months in December 2012.

Dispensaries are not permitted under the new regulation.

"I'm actually in favor of dispensaries," City Councilwoman Laura Dwyer
Schlecte, 4th Ward, said before voting in favor of the ordinance. "But
I'm not the State Supreme Court."

In February, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled that dispensaries in the
state that handle patient-to-patient sales of medicinal pot could be
shut down as public nuisances. Shortly after the ruling, Jackson
County Prosecutor Jerry Jarzynka ordered all 18 dispensaries in the
county.

Schlecte headed a work group charged with drafting the
ordinance.

The repealing of the moratorium and the establishment of the new
ordinance both passed by a 5-2 margin. City Councilmen Daniel Greer,
3rd Ward, and Andrew Frounfelker, 5th Ward, voted against both measures.

Greer refused to comment on his decision. Frounfelker could not be
reached for comment.

Roger Maufort is the president of the Jackson County Compassion Club,
located within the city. The JCCC is a legal organization that
provides patients a resource to understanding new marijuana laws and
regulations.

Maufort said the city's ordinance is among other things "sloppy" and
"unenforceable."

"There are a number of provisions within the ordinance that don't mesh
with state law," he said. "I don't feel as though (council members and
city attorneys) fully understand state law and subsequent cases."

Maufort took issue with a section of the ordinance that allows for
tenants to grow and use medical marijuana as long as they have a
notarized statement from their landlord approving the use.

"By asking your landlord to use medical marijuana, you're admitting
you have a medical condition, which goes against a person's privacy
rights," he said.

Maufort also takes issue with a provision that calls for "no highly
explosive or combustible material" stored within the home of someone
growing or using medical marijuana.

"What about gas for your lawnmower," he asked. "Why was that included
at all? I don't get it. I'm pretty sure medical marijuana users also
mow their lawns."

City Councilman Derek Dobies, 6th Ward, agrees with Maufort to a
certain extent, and said the ordinance will be hard to enforce.

"That's why we created provisions like the '20 percent of a unit,'" he
said. "We think it provides for a safe home, and directs people to not
fill their house to the brim with marijuana plants."

The councilman worked with Schlecte on the city's medical marijuana
work group.

Dobies said the new ordinance will likely have a grace period for
residents to learn about the provisions in the law.

"Like the non-owner occupied registry, we'll be lenient initially," he
said.

Any person found in violation of the ordinance could be punished with
a fine of no more than $500 and the possibility of no more than 90
days of imprisonment. Each day that violation occurs constitutes a
separate offense, according to the ordinance.
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MAP posted-by: Matt