Tag Los Angeles

Los Angeles Can Not Go It Alone on Medicinal Pot

04 February, 23:23, by admin Tags: ,

L.A.’s new ordinance on pot dispensaries attempts to answer the needs of the ailing while ensuring public safety and abiding by state and federal law.

The Los Angeles City Council last week finally adopted a medical marijuana ordinance. Though not perfect, it balances the needs of local communities with those of patients who truly need access to medical marijuana. And it will rein in an out-of-control situation in which a federally banned substance has been sold for the last four years as hundreds of dispensaries proliferated in the city of Los Angeles, with no local regulations and ambiguous state laws to guide us.

To make the new ordinance work as effectively as possible, legislators need to clarify the state’s medical marijuana laws — Proposition 215 and its accompanying SB 420. Both are silent or vague on critical issues for the practical implementation at the local level.

As cities throughout California draft ordinances, they are grappling with issues that they have no power over and that should be handled at the state level. Moreover, they are trying to pinpoint evolving and changing court rulings interpreting state law.

In Los Angeles, one of the most difficult issues was what constitutes a “sale.” My colleagues on the City Council and I addressed this by stipulating that although no collective shall operate for profit, “cash and in-kind contributions, reimbursements and reasonable compensation” are allowed as long as they comply with current state law. However, we don’t know how this provision will be enforced because we are relying on state law that is unclear and in litigation.

It is also unclear whether the over-the-counter dispensary model was what voters intended when they approved Proposition 215. The law might have intended a much more limited distribution of marijuana, such as having either patients or their caregivers grow their own product or having collectives grow a small amount and reimburse members for their labor.

Without clarity from the state, the council also had to punt on the issues of cultivation and transportation of marijuana by saying that the ordinance would abide by state law.

Cultivation is important because the ordinance as written does not address where the collectives will obtain their marijuana. Will it be grown locally, imported from Northern California or bought on the black market? And are people who transport the marijuana to and from collectives immune from prosecution?

Another issue that is not being addressed locally but perhaps is the biggest impediment to properly regulating dispensaries relates to the wide discretion and relative immunity that physicians have in recommending medical marijuana to patients. When most of us have a medical issue, we don’t look through the pages of alternative weeklies to find a physician. We go to the doctor who knows the most about our medical history — our primary-care physician.

Yet under state law there is no requirement to curb abuse by having people see their primary-care physician first, or, as Oregon does, to require that a patient get a note from an “attending physician” with whom he or she has an established patient/physician relationship.

It’s interesting to note that Oregon, like several other states, only allows medical marijuana for a narrow list of conditions. In contrast, in California, marijuana can be recommended for anything from cancer to writer’s cramp. So, although California voters have not (yet) directed the state to legalize marijuana for nonmedical use, the state medical marijuana law has created de facto legalization because practically anyone can become a qualified patient.

Given these ambiguities, the city has provided an ordinance within existing state law that does its best to create access for medical marijuana patients while protecting local communities from potential negative consequences.

The council voted to support a requirement that dispensaries be at least 1,000 feet from sensitive-use areas where children and families gather, such as schools, playgrounds and places of worship — and from other dispensaries.

We also capped the number of collectives at 70 (instead of the estimated 700-plus that exist) and required notification to neighborhood councils before new dispensaries open in their areas. To control profiteering, we also required annual audits and outlawed common ownership of multiple collectives.

I, like a majority of California voters, voted in favor of Proposition 215 because I believe that patients dealing with cancer, AIDS, chronic pain and other serious ailments should have access to medical marijuana.

However, I remain concerned about profiteers looking to make a quick buck, recreational users looking to use an ambiguous state law to their advantage and less-than-scrupulous doctors willing to play along by writing quick and unverified recommendations. Though seemingly innocuous to some, these unchecked activities can lead to real problems in local communities should the state refuse to further regulate medical marijuana. I encourage state legislators to immediately amend SB 420 to deal with its ambiguities.

In the future, if the voters legalize marijuana for recreational use, I would hope that the state provides clear and practical rules for local implementation, unlike what has occurred with medical marijuana.

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Medical marijuana dispensary begs city to lay off

During what is traditionally a short ceremonial meeting to install Walnut Creek’s newest mayor, supporters of the city’s first medical marijuana dispensary decided to protest the city’s ongoing legal battle against it.

Members of the C3 Collective, working from a storefront on Oakland Boulevard to provide medical marijuana to its members, asked Tuesday night that the city ease up on its efforts to close the dispensary, which opened last summer.

The nonprofit is hit with $500 in zoning violation fines every day it’s open.

“By prosecuting this facility, you are in turn inhibiting and neglecting community growth,” said Brian Hyman, executive director and CEO of C3. “I try and meet your fine requests. It’s not feasible every day.”

Walnut Creek officials say the dispensary’s operation is prohibited because marijuana is illegal under federal law. According to an injunction filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court on Nov. 9, the collective is also in violation of Walnut Creek zoning laws. A dispensary, like a pharmacy, is prohibited where the collective operates.

The city sued the collective in October in an effort to shut down the dispensary; the first hearing in that case is in March. The city filed the injunction hoping to force C3 to close even sooner, but the injunction hearing isn’t until Feb. 25.

Supporters of the collective urged the council Tuesday to hold off the court case and allow patients to go to C3 until the council makes a decision about allowing and regulating dispensaries in Walnut Creek. City staff members are currently studying the issue.

Gary Skrel, who a half-hour later turned over reins as mayor to Sue Rainey, told the group that Tuesday’s meeting was unlike others, more of a celebration for the mayor’s appointment. He asked if they wanted to proceed anyway and speak, and seven chose to.

Bruce Reckel told the council he needs medical marijuana to function.

“The medication I receive there “… allows me to go to functions like this,” he said. “I hope that you would support the collective and support us by ending this lawsuit.”

Scot Candell, attorney for the collective, said Tuesday the city has spent $20,000 to $30,000 on the suit.

“The city is suing the collective. The collective is made up of patients, so basically the city is suing the patients,” Candell said. “I know this is (a) ceremonial (meeting) and everyone will go and have cocktails and everyone will live happily ever after, but hopefully once we start a new session this will be an issue that you can consider.”

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Digg.com vote presses Schwarzenegger on legalizing marijuana

29 December, 22:37, by admin Tags: , , , ,

As more government officials choose to publicly answer questions submitted by Internet users, they’re encountering a new phenomenon: marijuana activists intent on forcing answers to the would-you-legalize-pot question.

In March, President Obama’s first virtual town hall took a detour when questions about legalizing marijuana were voted to the top of the “financial stability,” “jobs,” “budget,” and (of course) “green jobs” polls on WhiteHouse.gov

On Wednesday, it was California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, who was put on the spot. Digg.com users propelled a legalize-marijuana question to the No. 2 position (behind one asking about what he was thinking when photographed grimacing at President George W. Bush).

Earlier this month, Schwarzenegger said “it’s time for debate” about legalizing marijuana. Read on for an excerpt from the CNN interview.

Q: What is your stance on the legalization, cultivation, and regulation of marijuana in the state of California?

A: I like the law that we have in place. And I don’t believe in legalizing marijuana, but I’m always open for the debate because there are people that feel differently. And I said I’m always interested in debating any of these issues because there’s always different ways of looking at it. And I think it would be interesting to see the information that is available, if there’s any information available, of how well countries are doing that have legalized marijuana. But I don’t think that information is available, and I’d want us to see that.

But I believe in the law, the way the law is right now, and I think it’s worked very well for the state of California. And I think it would be a mistake to just go and legalize something that we don’t believe in just because it would produce an extra billion dollars in revenues. And I think we just have to learn how to live within our means rather than trying to do things we really don’t want to do.

Q: New polls actually show that more than half of Californians support legalizing marijuana. So would that sway your stance on it whatsoever in this open debate that you’re calling for? Would it sway your opinion?

A: Well, it could very well go on an initiative one day, where they ask the voters directly, that could very well be. And if the voters make that decision, that’s fine. But I think it is very important for us to make certain decisions not just because they would bring in some extra money, and I think this is why people have been talking about that in California, to go in that direction, and to start debating that issue. Because it would produce, as they say, $1.3 billion, $1.4 billion extra revenues.

Thanks to a 1996 ballot measure, medical marijuana is already legal under California law, though local officials have substantial discretion. Although that conflicts with federal law, the Obama administration has chosen not to target California medical marijuana dispensaries.

State legislator Tom Ammiano, a San Francisco Democrat, introduced a bill in February to legalize recreational marijuana. Bill AB 390 would license “commercial cultivators of marijuana” and establish a complicated web of regulations and tax rules they and retailers must follow.

It could raise over $1.2 billion a year in new tax revenues, assuming a $50-an-ounce tax, according to an analysis by California NORML, an organization working to reform the state’s marijuana laws.

A Field poll released on April 30 found that 56 percent of the state’s registered voters support legalizing marijuana and taxing its sale.

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“…Marijuana Legalization: the time is now” Gov: Arnold Schwarzenegger

29 December, 22:25, by admin Tags: , , , ,

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Medical Marijuana Los Angeles – What You Should Know

20 December, 14:59, by admin Tags: , ,

You may have noticed that there has been a lot of news recently about buying medical marijuana in Los Angeles from different marijuana dispensaries. This type of cannabis can only be purchased through a prescription process. This is because the handful of States where this is possible allows the purchase mainly for medical purposes only. This means that a person who would like to buy and use medicinal marijuana needs to be medically qualified by law to obtain a prescription for marijuana for medical purposes. Hence, anyone caught in possession of the drug without the required prescription can be criminally prosecuted under the law.

Under the Compassionate Act of 1996 passed by the people of California, physicians as well as the patients need to follow certain guidelines in the use, approval or recommendation of cannabis in order for them to be immune from criminal prosecution or any other sanction imposed by the State for the illegal use of the drug. Buying medical marijuana in Los Angeles requires that the applicant for the prescription must be one who is suffering from chronic pain such as back pain, accident injuries, or other surgical related pain; a cancer patient; AIDS patient; one suffering from mood disorders such as bipolar disorder, depression, ADHD, autism; anorexic; one suffering from arthritis; and severe migraines.

There are numerous marijuana dispensaries and physicians authorized by law to issue and provide medical marijuana in Los Angeles. Sources of information and referrals for evaluation centers and doctors for a cannabis card may be found in the net or the local newspaper. You can make your inquiry or application by merely placing a call to determine if a certain physician would perform a medical marijuana card evaluation to see if you qualify for a prescription. It is highly advised that you personally consult a doctor that will educate you and orientate you about the medicinal marijuana product and how to properly handle it and keep it away from other members of the family.

Laws pertaining to obtaining this drug is somewhat the same all throughout the United States. The difference lies in the imposable punishment for violation of the law in other states and Federal Courts. This is one thing that you should bear in mind if you decide to make use of marijuana for medical purposes. There is a saying which is in fact a principle in the practice of the law which states that ignorance of the law excuses no one from compliance therewith. Therefore, it is of utmost importance to know as to what extent you are allowed by law in using cannabis and what are those guidelines that should be followed. This will surely save you from getting into trouble with the law in the future.

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