Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jul 2016
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Column: The 420
Copyright: 2016 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: Ngaio Bealum

NO DANK, NO DOSH

I am a 37-year-old mom that suffers from bipolar and major depressive 
disorder. I am on prescription meds but they don't always work. 
Sometimes the only thing that will pull me out of a deep, suicidal 
depression is smoking a pure sativa strain of medical marijuana. I 
have my recommendation from a doctor and am able to obtain it from 
dispensaries. However, I live in Rancho Cordova and have realized 
there are zero dispensaries to be found in my city. City council has 
deemed that medical marijuana dispensaries are "a public nuisance in 
that many violent crimes have been committed that can be traced back 
to the proliferation of marijuana dispensaries, including armed 
robberies and murders." I did some minor fact checking and found that 
this simply is not true. ... Are you able to steer me in the right 
direction of whom to talk to or how to go about getting a city 
council to change an ordinance?

- -Blue Jay

Sorry for cutting out a few parts of your 600-word email. You made 
some very valid points about cannabis clubs being safe and cool and 
clean and awesome. However, please don't expect reasoned and 
well-thought-out arguments to win the day. Most elected officials, 
like the good people of the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors 
and especially the ones in Rancho, are unable to listen to reason 
when it comes to matters of the cannabis plant. We tried using common 
sense and valid, reasoned arguments years ago and they listened 
politely, agreed with us and then banned clubs anyway. Sigh.

Like you pointed out in your letter, there are studies showing that 
crime rates go down in areas that have cannabis dispensaries. I have 
no idea why cities and counties continue to do themselves (and their 
tax base) a giant disservice by continuing to ban cannabis 
businesses. My one gripe with the proposed Adult Use of Marijuana Act 
(and Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act, enacted last year) 
is that cities and counties still have the power to ban cannabis. 
Although, AUMA does have a rule where if a city or county bans 
cannabis businesses, they don't get access to any of the cannabis tax 
money. Hopefully, this will compel some cities and counties to get 
with the times, but I am not optimistic.

As to how you can get your board of supes on the cannabis bandwagon: 
Good luck. You may need an entirely new city council. Maybe you 
should run for office.

I read that the water supply in Colorado is tainted with THC. True?

- -Og Waifina

Nope. Although the town of Hugo, Colo., (population 700, no 
canna-businesses allowed) did claim to have found THC in one of the 
town's wells, further testing by the county showed this hysteria to 
be unfounded and most likely due to faulty tests. Duh. Surprise. You 
don't even need a test to tell you this, you just need science. THC, 
the chemical in pot that gets you high, is mostly insoluble in water, 
so it doesn't bind to water molecules-meaning THC-infused water is a 
scientific improbability.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom