Medical pot issue returns
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Dave Brooks
Medical marijuana is back on the table at the Huntington Beach City
Council, following a procedural error by city staff.
The City Council enacted a 45-day ban on issuing permits to
medical marijuana dispensaries at its Feb. 7 meeting, but City Atty.
Jennifer McGrath said that vote didn’t count because the ordinance
didn’t receive enough affirmative votes.
“State law requires a fourth-fifths vote on legislation adopting a
moratorium,” she said.
The Feb. 7 vote received only five affirmative votes for the seven
person council -- Debbie Cook voted against the ban and mayor Jill
Hardy was absent.
Hardy, who was away in Washington D.C. chaperoning her Model
United Nations students from Huntington Beach High School and
lobbying for several federal grants, now finds herself the swing vote
on the issue when it returns to council on Feb 22.
“My initial reaction is ‘Why aren’t we banning all Class 1
narcotics that are given out by pharmacies?” she said, adding that
she plans to discuss the issue with Police Chief Ken Small and attend
the public hearing before making her decision.
Small said he is asking for the moratorium after conferring with
police officials from other California cities that have medical
marijuana facilities. He said the temporary ban is not an attack on
the merits of medical marijuana, but a chance for city staff to enter
a dialogue on where a medical marijuana facility should be located.
“I think it will give the city time to look at the zoning,” he
said. “A facility might need to be a certain distance from a park or
school.”
As for the larger legal issues surrounding medical marijuana,
Small said “from our perspective, that issue was resolved by the
voters of California. We don’t have a dog in this fight.”
In 1996, voters approved the first ordinance in the country to
legalize the use of marijuana to treat ailments like glaucoma or
AIDS. The law immediately came under attack from the U.S. Department
of Justice, which argued that the ordinance violated federal
prohibitions on marijuana. Eleven other states have laws allowing the
medical use of marijuana.
A case on the legality of medical marijuana is pending before the
United States Supreme Court. In that case, Raich v. Ashcroft, the
justices are being asked to decide whether Congress’ ability to
regulate interstate commerce includes the right to restrict patients
from cultivating small plots of medical marijuana for personal use.
So far only one group, Compassionate Caregivers, has petitioned
the city for more information about building a medical marijuana
dispensary in Huntington Beach. An employee at Compassionate
Caregiver’s West Hollywood clinic said the group did not grant
interviews with the media. According to a report issued by the
California chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws, Compassionate Caregivers operate about a half-dozen
dispensaries throughout the state in locations such as Mendocino
County, Oakland and Bakersfield.
Orange County has at least two registered medical marijuana
dispensaries, including an Anaheim-based dispensary known as 420
Primary Caregivers.
Office manager Ken Nichols said the dispensary gets along well
with its neighbors.
“We haven’t had any complaints. We’re very conscious about our
appearance and security,” he said, adding that the facility employs
armed guards and doesn’t allow smoking on the premises.
Small noted other California cities have had problems with medical
marijuana dispensaries. Oakland police have told him that their
facilities attract criminals who try to illegally purchase marijuana,
or rob patients who have it, Small wrote in a report to City Council,
while patrons in Roseville often congregate at a local park near a
facility to use the substance.
“These facilities have created adverse impacts on communities,
which have permitted them,” Small wrote.
Roseville Police Public Information Officer Dee Dee Gunther said
the city’s medical marijuana dispensary was recently raided and
closed by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, but was never a major
generator of crime.
“We got a couple of calls for service, but often it was the owner
calling to complain. One time someone was handing out business cards
in front of the dispensary telling people that he could sell
marijuana cheaper,” she said. “Other than that, I wouldn’t say it
brought a huge wave of crime with it, nor did a huge wave of crime
occur after it left.”
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