Pubdate: Thu, 16 Oct 2003 Source: Daily Review, The (LA) Copyright: 2003 Morgan City Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.daily-review.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1876 Author: Michelle Meyers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) COUNCIL REACHES POT-CLUB ACCORD COMPROMISE ALLOWS THREE DISPENSARIES TO STAY OPEN ON DOWNTOWN'S FOOTHILL BOULEVARD The City Coun-cil informally agreed Tuesday evening on a compromise that allows three existing medical marijuana dispensaries to stay open in downtown Hayward on the east side of Foothill Boulevard. After hashing over concerns of the 40-some medical marijuana advocates who crowded the work session room, council members said the issue isn't about whether they support pot for medicinal uses. They apparently do -- almost all voiced concern for those in pain and in need of well-run dispensaries. "The issue is what do we do about the zoning," said Councilwoman Doris Rodriquez, touting Hayward's reputation for being a compassionate city. And it's also about how to tacitly allow the dispensaries to exist without regulating or formally sanctioning them, and consequently getting the city involved in an inherent conflict between state and federal law. Proposition 215 legalized marijuana for medical uses in California, although it is still con-sidered illegal under federal law. The compromise plan, which is still subject to a vote at a future council meeting, evolved out of an ad hoc committee of city officials, community members and medical marijuana advocates who met last summer. The committee was formed last spring after the city learned three clubs, one old and two new, were operating outside the boundaries of the city's zoning law. Members of the business community raised concerns, in particular about one dispensary operating on B Street, a focal point of downtown redevelopment. The compromise plan includes developing a local medical marijuana patient iden-tification card modeled after one passed last spring by the Alameda County Board of Supervisors that applies to the unin-corporated areas of the county. City Manager Jesus Armas recommended the council pass a law recognizing the county ID cards, despite a bill signed by Gov. Gray Davis on Sunday creating a statewide ID card registry. Armas said the bill won't go into effect until next year, and it may take a while to get the new registry under way, which the county would have to maintain anyway. The bill and a U.S. Supreme Court decision Monday, allowing doctors to speak frankly with their patients about the medical use of marijuana, were hailed by speakers at Tuesday's meeting as positive steps for patients and caregivers. The state bill also grants recognition to medical marijuana cooperatives like the Hayward dispensaries, something speak-ers used to persuade the council to allow three facilities instead of two. The compromise plan from the ad hoc committee grandfathers Local Patients Cooperative and The Hempery for three years. But the deal was predicated on the assumption that the former Helping Hands Patient Cooperative was moving from its B Street location to a new site on unincorporated county land. Helping Hands instead has closed and reopened under new management in a Foothill Boulevard dress shop on the east side of the street, owned by Jane Weirick, an ad hoc committee member and the former president of the Medical Cannabis Association. Much of the 45 minutes of public testimony was from leaders in the medical marijuana field who gave accolades to Weirick for her professionalism and longtime commitment to patients. "This is the kind of compassionate provider that you want in Hayward," said Hilary McQuie, political director with Americans for Safe Access. Others, like patient Stacy Fernandez, said there's a need for three shops because each one offers different atmospheres and strains of marijuana that relieve different ailments. Fernandez, who compared the strains to different varieties of tomatoes, said the city would never limit drugstores to just Longs and Walgreens. Castro Valley resident Karen Nicholson, whose son uses marijuana medically for his depression, said she's thankful that he can go safely to the dispensaries instead of having to get his medicine through other means. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin