Pubdate: Wed 29 Jun 2005 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Copyright: 2005 San Francisco Examiner Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/389 Author: J.K. Dineen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) SOMA RESIDENTS 'SMOKE' POT CLUB IN LEGAL BATTLE Chalk up a victory for the Tenacious Mom of Tehama Street. South of Market resident Laura Weil celebrated with neighbors Wednesday after Superior Court Judge Ronald Quidachay ordered a medical marijuana dispensary abutting her property to close its doors. Weil and her neighbor, Aysu Zeidman, complained that the back door of Health & Wellness Alternatives, a pot dispensary at 935 Howard St., opened onto the heart of their residential block and that the odor of marijuana wafted up to their windows, where they and their children could smell it. They also worried about the patrons driving in the alley while stoned and complained there was a lack of security at the club. The ruling comes nearly four months after Weil, a registered nurse at UCSF and mother of two young children, started battling the recently opened club, and just a day after a city supervisor introduced a bill to ban the clubs in residential neighborhoods. While Weil welcomed that legislation, she said efforts to go through the political and planning channels were taking too long, so she and her neighbors decided to fight it in court. She said it has been expensive and time-consuming. "We could have planted trees with that money, or flowers ... there are things we could have done with that money instead of doing The City's job," Weil said. "The City should be enforcing its code violations. I shouldn't have to do it privately." In granting the temporary restraining order against the club, Quidachay said owners Charlie Pappas and Aundre Speciale violated local planning laws by not obtaining a conditional use permit before opening, which is required in the mixed-use zone. Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi on Tuesday also introduced a bill that would require criminal background checks for pot club owners and ban the clubs in residential neighborhoods. Pappas, a quadriplegic poet from Berkeley, said he "doesn't want to harass the neighborhood" and that he was unaware he was opening his club near housing. But he said Weil seems intent on putting him out of business no matter what. "I didn't know I needed a conditional use," he said. "I totally support the need to have fewer dispensaries, but picking them off one by one by nitpicking ... is not the way to do it." Tehama Street, a narrow alley just south of Howard Street, is home to printing and design businesses as well as a growing number of children, including Filipino families who have been in the alley for decades as well as new families. "We've put our heart into this neighborhood and we want to stay," said Zeidman, a mother of two who relocated here from London. "You reach a critical mass and it becomes a family neighborhood -- and we're pretty much there," Weil said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin