HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Green Enterprise
Pubdate: Sun, 24 Apr 2011
Source: Corvallis Gazette-Times (OR)
Copyright: 2011 Lee Enterprises
Contact: https://gazettetimes-dot-com.bloxcms.com/app/forms/contact/letters/
Website: http://www.gazettetimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2976
Author: Bennett Hall, Corvallis Gazette-Times
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.)
Bookmark: http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-or (Oregon)

Medical Marijuana

GREEN ENTERPRISE

Marijuana-Themed Businesses Sprouting Around the Mid-Valley

After years of hiding in the shadows, medical marijuana is suddenly 
stepping out into plain view in the mid-valley - and prescription pot 
advocates say there's no turning back now.

"Here we are," proclaimed Sheri Levit, executive director of the 
Linn-Benton Oregon Medical Marijuana Program Patient Resource Center, 
which opened its doors this week on the outskirts of Albany. "We're 
not going anywhere."

Modeled after Portland's Cannabis Cafe, the Patient Resource Center 
is a kind of social club for Oregon Medical Marijuana Program 
cardholders, who can buy snacks and soft drinks, relax in the game 
room or belly up to the "vapor bar" for a lungful of vaporized marijuana fumes.

Housed in a nondescript industrial building at 30943 Ehlen Road, near 
the intersection of Oakville Road and Highway 34, the nonprofit 
enterprise introduced itself to the community with an open house and 
barbecue that began at 4:20 p.m. on Wednesday. The time and the date 
- - 4/20 - are both winking allusions to stoner slang for smoking dope.

Despite the lighthearted atmosphere, Levit and her partner, Kathy 
Srp, insist that marijuana is serious medicine. Levit, a registered 
patient, uses cannabis to ease the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, 
migraines and degenerative disk disease in her back. Srp, a licensed 
caregiver, grows the weed for her husband, who also has degenerative 
disk disease.

Card-holding patients will be able to bring their own marijuana to 
the Patient Resource Center to "self-medicate," or they can partake 
of donated pot. Cash contributions are encouraged, but no actual 
buying or selling is allowed.

"We are not a dispensary," Levit said. "That's not legal in Oregon - yet."

The lack of dispensaries creates problems for Oregon's 39,000 medical 
marijuana patients, who must either grow their own or find a 
caregiver to grow it for them. Caregivers can be reimbursed for their 
costs, but state law bars profiting from pot, which is still 
classified as an illegal substance by the federal government.

One of the main functions of the Patient Resource Center will be to 
help patients find a steady source of supply by matching them with 
willing growers. But another purpose, organizers say, is simply to 
provide Oregon Medical Marijuana Program participants with a sense of 
community.

"People can come in and medicate and hang out," Levit said. "It's 
just a place for like-minded people to get together and have a safe 
place to come."

Levit and Srp hope to bring in a physician once or twice a month to 
consult with people who may qualify for the Oregon Medical Marijuana 
Program. Only certain conditions can be legally treated with 
cannabis, and a doctor's signature is required to get a medical marijuana card.

The partners plan to hold classes for state-registered cannabis 
patients and caregivers on growing techniques, legal issues and 
alternatives to smoking the medicinal herb, which can also be 
ingested in capsule form, added to food or infused in a topical salve.

There will be monthly meetings for cardholders and quarterly 
informational sessions for the curious public.

"We want to educate people," Levit said. "There's a lot of 
misconceptions out there."

Out in the Open

The mid-valley is already home to several head shops that sell 
vaporizers, pipes and other smoking supplies, as well as gardening 
centers that carry growing equipment. M-Research, a marijuana testing 
service, opened in Corvallis last year.

But the Patient Resource Center is raising the drug's visibility to 
new heights, and similar ventures are in the works elsewhere in the 
region. At least two businesses catering to medicinal marijuana users 
are poised to open in Corvallis in the next few weeks, and there 
could be even more to come.

Ed Glick, a former Samaritan Health Services nurse and longtime 
medical marijuana advocate, is negotiating a lease to open a downtown clinic.

Scheduled to open by the end of May, the Medicine Flower Center will 
provide physician consultations for potential marijuana patients, as 
well as assistance with filling out the registration paperwork.

Glick also hopes to offer massage therapy, acupuncture and other 
alternative treatments and lead classes on various aspects of 
medicinal cannabis.

"I'm envisioning a very professional office," said Glick, who 
previously managed similar clinics in Portland and Eugene. "I'm not 
envisioning any kind of freak place."

Glick said there are plenty of other like-minded entrepreneurs in the 
area working on business plans of their own. Among the ventures being 
seriously discussed are a farmers market, a cannabis co-op and a 
delivery service.

"We're working in kind of a multipronged way to set up a system here 
in town because there are really no medical marijuana services in 
Benton County, Linn County or Lincoln County - it's kind of a dark hole."

He also expects to see a series of public events celebrating the 
benefits of marijuana, such as an outdoor hemp festival with live 
music and a party atmosphere.

"Those things happen all over the place," Glick pointed out. "You 
have to remember that one of the side effects of cannabis is 
euphoria. It makes people feel good."

Meanwhile, a Portland-based chain of dispensary-style exchange 
services called Club Pit Bull is in discussions with two different 
ownership groups about opening a Corvallis franchise in the near future.

The company is an offshoot of Stoney Girl Gardens, a seed supply 
business that also operates a "higher education" arm called 
Portlandsterdam University.

Mike Mullins, a partner in Stoney Girl Gardens, said Club Pit Bull 
acts as a nonprofit go-between for growers and patients. Cultivators 
make their produce available at the club, and cardholders can 
reimburse them for their costs.

"(Patients) need a safe place to get medicine," Mullins said. "They 
should not be forced to go to a drug dealer."

The club will be open to Oregon Medical Marijuana Program cardholders 
only, and a staff member will monitor all exchanges for compliance 
with the law. Educational services will also be available, but no 
smoking is allowed on the premises.

"This is not the bong-hitters in Dad's garage," he said. "This is a 
professional industry."

It's also an ambitious business venture. Since the first Club Pit 
Bull opened last October in Salem, other locations have followed in 
Ontario, Aloha, Milwaukie and Rainier.

And Stoney Girl has no intention of slowing down.

"We expect to have 17 by the end of the month," Mullins said. "We're 
hoping to sponsor 40 clubs this year and ultimately 100 clubs in Oregon."

Business Is Booming

What's driving this sudden surge of green enterprise? Several factors 
may be coming into play.

During the Bush administration, federal officials launched a 
crackdown on states like Oregon that have relaxed pot laws. But after 
President Barack Obama took office in 2009, his attorney general 
signaled that the Justice Department would no longer pursue medical 
marijuana cases.

Another reason, ironically enough, may have been last year's defeat 
of Measure 74, an initiative that would have created a state 
dispensary system. In November, Oregon voters shot that proposal down 
56 percent to 44 percent.

"Measure 74's failure was a shock to some people," said Keith Mansur, 
editor and publisher of Oregon Cannabis Connection, a bimonthly 
tabloid with a healthy ad line and a circulation of 27,000 copies. "I 
think they were prepared to open dispensaries when it passed."

When the initiative tanked, Mansur believes, some of those 
entrepreneurs decided to proceed anyway, tweaking their business 
plans to provide dispensary-like services without actually selling weed.

"If they're dispensing medicine for donation, that's the way they get 
around saying that they're charging for it."

Mixed Reactions

The unexpected influx of medical marijuana merchants has caught 
mid-valley officials by surprise.

In Corvallis, city planners are scrambling to determine what sort of 
zoning category a business like Club Pit Bull would fall under.

"Is it a medical facility? Is it a club? What is it exactly?" 
wondered Kevin Young, manager of the Corvallis Planning Division. 
"This is not the first in Oregon, but it's a first for Corvallis."

In the end, Young said, he thinks the city will probably find a 
zoning category that fits.

Corvallis Police Chief Gary Boldizsar said he can imagine a variety 
of problems arising from such a venture, ranging from parking issues 
and impaired driving to robbers targeting drug supplies. But as long 
as the business itself is within legal guidelines, he would make no 
effort to shut it down.

"If they aren't violating any law, the Police Department position is 
OK, here it comes," Boldizsar said.

Benton County Sheriff Diana Simpson said she, too, would respect the 
rights of anyone operating a legal enterprise. But she made no secret 
of the fact that she thinks any business that promotes marijuana use 
- - medical or otherwise - is a bad idea.

"Marijuana is a gateway drug," Simpson said. "It leads to more 
extensive drug use."

And in Linn County, where the Linn-Benton Oregon Medical Marijuana 
Program Patient Resource Center operates, Sheriff Tim Mueller said 
he'll be keeping a close eye on things.

"We'll be watching it, making sure people are obeying the law," 
Mueller said. "If that's what they're going to do, they'd best be 
following the laws of this state or they will be held accountable."

Not Backing Down

For their part, medical marijuana proponents say they've been making 
an effort to keep government regulators and law enforcement officials 
informed of their intentions in hopes of creating a cooperative relationship.

"We're making sure we are following the law to a T," said Levit, the 
Patient Resource Center director. "We don't want any problems."

But they're also making it clear that they intend to stand up for 
their rights under the law.

"We try to address their concerns right up front," Club Pit Bull's 
Mullins said of his approach to local law enforcement. "We don't ask 
for their permission, but we do ask for their understanding."

The bottom line, according to the Medicine Flower Center's Glick, is 
that medicinal marijuana is here to stay.

"Medical cannabis is growing by leaps and bounds," he said. "I think 
we are at a tipping point. We're not going to go back."  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake