Pubdate: Tue, 06 Nov 2001 Source: San Francisco Bay Guardian (CA) Copyright: 2001 San Francisco Bay Guardian Contact: http://www.sfbg.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/387 Author: Tali Woodward Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) LOW TIMES: S.F. POT CLUB CLOSES, FEARS RAIDS Several people gathered Nov. 1 inside the yellow-and-purple walls of Cannabis Healing Californians, a pot club on 10th Street. It wasn't the sort of scene one might expect -- there was no giggling, no napping, no "dude, where's my pipe?" comments. There are 1,200 people in the club's database. Most suffer from AIDS or cancer; to get marijuana, they must show a California ID, a doctor's recommendation, and a cannabis ID card issued by the city's Department of Public Health. They come to get weed and also to take advantage of yoga classes, massage, acupuncture, and nutritional advice -- all free. A patient named Deborah says pot from the club has helped her kick her prescription pill habit. "When my parents saw me for the first time in six months, they said, 'Whatever you're doing, don't stop,' " she says. "I'm a completely changed person." Now the club, one of several city dens where the afflicted can find a little bit of comfort, is in the process of shutting down. The owners say they think the Oct. 25 Drug Enforcement Administration raid of a respected club in West Hollywood is the opening shot in a large-scale attack on medical marijuana by the Bush administration. It's a move that many have anticipated since the Supreme Court ruled in May that federal law overrides Proposition 215, the 1996 initiative that sanctioned medical marijuana in California. San Francisco district attorney Terence Hallinan told the Bay Guardian he has no knowledge that the Drug Enforcement Administration is planning raids in San Francisco, though "a number of clubs feel they are under surveillance." Hallinan called on the feds Nov. 5 to stay away from San Francisco clubs, saying that Prop. 215 has been successfully implemented here and that street crime is down as a result. Sup. Mark Leno introduced legislation the same day that would make the city "a sanctuary for medical cannabis use, cultivation, and distribution." It also urges state and local authorities not to participate in a federal crackdown. Supporters of medical marijuana are cheered by the efforts, but they're not resting any easier. While pot laws in other countries are being loosened -- just last week the United Kingdom reclassified marijuana as a soft drug -- the U.S. government seems determined to step up antimarijuana efforts. After Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas wrote his anti-Prop. 215 opinion, which said that the federal Controlled Substances Act prohibits the distribution of marijuana, several conservative members of Congress urged U.S. attorney general John Ashcroft to stop pot smoking where it is permitted by state or county law. (Right now eight states and the District of Columbia have medical pot laws on the books.) Dale Gieringer, the California coordinator of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and one of the lead organizers for Prop. 215, says the L.A. raid makes it clear that President George W. Bush has nothing but the worst intentions when it comes to medical marijuana. And while Gieringer is hopeful that even federal law can be changed, he stresses the immediate effects of a concerted crackdown. "They have completely destroyed the legal medical marijuana market in L.A.," Gieringer says, sending people out into the black market and potentially to jail. "They're creating marijuana criminals. I don't know what possible good the government thinks they're doing." Robin Few, who opened Cannabis Healing Californians with Michael Foley, uses pot to treat her Hepatitis C and also to keep from drinking. "I was a barfly. I went from bar to bar," she says, acknowledging that her club's late hours (usually it's open 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.) are designed to give people a place to hang out. "Look at what we've built with our city," Few says. "How can the federal government come in now, when there's anthrax to worry about?" Dennis Collins, a 55-year-old Vietnam vet who has spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal canal that compresses nerves and causes intense pain, is standing by the club's door. "My neurosurgeon was going to put me on pain pills and said I'd have to get liver and kidney tests every six months," he says. "I asked him, 'Do you mean to tell me that these pills are going to wreck my liver or kidneys? Is there an alternative?' " Collins's doctor suggested he try marijuana, and four years later he says it enables him to walk without pain and to eat more healthily. He takes the bus up from San Mateo once a month to buy weed. Where will Collins go now that the club is closing? Few and Foley are giving their regular customers directions to other clubs, sometimes walking them outside to point the way. "There are other clubs open," Foley said. "But who knows how long that'll last?" - --- MAP posted-by: Josh