Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jun 2004
Source: Daily Review, The (Hayward, CA)
Copyright: 2004 ANG Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.dailyreviewonline.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410
Author: Michelle Meyers, Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

HEMPERY'S CLOSURE MEANS ANOTHER POT SUPPLIER STAYS

Hayward's Remaining Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Already Busier Because 
of Reduced Number in Oakland

HAYWARD -- Patients and employees at a downtown medical marijuana 
dispensary were elated Tuesday after learning that the city is allowing the 
facility to operate for an additional two years.

"We're very excited," said Jane Weirick, owner of Hayward Patients' 
Resource Center. "Now we can start thinking about programs we want to offer 
long-term."

The news came on the heels of the city's revocation of an agreement with 
the landmark Hayward Hempery, which would have allowed its medical 
marijuana dispensary to operate through December 2006 under specific 
circumstances.

The decade-old Hempery, which was on the corner of B Street and Foothill 
Boulevard, violated the grandfathering agreement with the city by never 
getting a business license, said City Manager Jesus Armas.

Hempery owner Cheryl Adams was evicted from her building and faces felony 
drug possession charges stemming from an arrest in Fremont late last year.

Since the Hempery is no longer authorized to operate, the city gave its 
three-year grandfathering time limit to Weirick's HPRC. That was part of an 
agreement the City Council made with three dispensaries it sanctioned last 
year amid a public debate about how to handle a sprouting number of 
downtown dispensaries.

The Hempery and Local Patients Cooperative - also downtown on Foothill 
Boulevard - were both grandfathered for three years, or until December 
2006, as long as they follow a list of regulations. HPRC, which was a 
newcomer to the scene, was grandfathered for only one year - until now.

"I'm encouraged by (the news)," said a Hayward patient nicknamed "Quizmo," 
who declined to give his real name. "Safe access is the point."

Shane, 29, of Newark, who asked that his last name not be used, added that 
patients like him can now count on the HPRC being there. He has been using 
marijuana for his chronic gout for three years under a doctor's recommendation.

Adams has been unavailable for comment -- none of her four business or 
cellular phone numbers is connected.

In the meantime, Ron Ikebe, who owns the former Hempery building, said he's 
been fixing it up while it's in escrow. He intends to sell the building to 
the owner of the adjacent building -- where HPRC is located.

The buyer's Realtor, Michael Tanzillo, said his client plans to fix up the 
building and lease it to a tenant who would feed off traffic from the 
planned Cinema Place movie theater complex across the street.

A preliminary hearing in Adam's drug possession case is scheduled for June 
11 at the Fremont Hall of Justice.

Two Dispensaries Remain

The Hempery's closure leaves just two city-sanctioned downtown 
dispensaries, whose owners have agreed to a list of guidelines. Some of 
those include limiting the amount of pot on-site to 3 pounds per day, 
banning advertising and encouraging patients not to smoke on-site.

Left out of that agreement was a dispensary downtown in Main Street coffee 
shop. It remains in operation despite earlier talk of plans to move to 
unincorporated Alameda County.

Bob Swanson, an aide to Alameda County Supervisor Nate Miley, said there 
seems to be some growing political support among a couple of City Council 
and Chamber of Commerce members to allow Main Street to stay.

But that's not the read Armas has on the council, he said, adding that the 
city has no plans to revisit the grandfathering agreement.

There are also now three known dispensaries operating in unincorporated 
Alameda County -- one on Lewelling Boulevard and two new ones on East 14th 
Street, Swanson said. They made it through a recent county code enforcement 
officer inspection, Swanson said, adding that Miley plans to work on some 
county regulations for medical marijuana dispensaries.

Demand Up

Like Hayward's, the dispensaries in the unincorporated area are likely to 
be even busier now that Oakland is closing all but four of its pot 
dispensaries, said Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland Cannabis 
Buyers Cooperative.

"There is a runoff to Hayward," he said, adding that he has been sending 
South Bay residents to Hayward because there are no dispensaries in San 
Jose. "And for lack of a better term, there's a 'Haysterdam' zone -- three 
dispensaries in a couple-block area. And there's good parking and quality 
service."

Weirick said she has already noticed an increase in patients since 
Oakland's June 1 ordinance limiting the number of permits to dispensaries 
took effect.

"Oh, yeah. We've had three-or four-dozen new people I've never seen 
before," she said, adding that it's going to be challenging to meet the 
3-pound limit.

Shon Squier, who owns Local Patients Cooperative, said he's had trouble 
with the 3-pound limit since the beginning, especially in light of business 
taxes. There's no sales tax on marijuana.

"The business is always picking up," Squier said, adding that the limit 
makes it hard to keep all of the different marijuana strains on hand.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake