Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 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, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) City-Run Hotel's Newest Tenant Troubles Residents POT CLUB'S PRESENCE SEEN AS HARMFUL TO FORMER ADDICTS As a shining light of The City's new Care Not Cash program, the All-Star Hotel has become a welcome home for dozens of hardened transients escaping drug-infested shelters and street corners. So it was a shock this week when residents of the Mission District facility, many of whom are recovering drug addicts, learned exactly what kind of "health clinic" would be opening in a retail space downstairs - a medical marijuana clinic. Resident manager Robert Williams said he only learned of the pot dispensary Friday when he smelled the telltale odor drifting up into his office. "The smell was overwhelming. We had no idea what was going on down there," he said. "Some of the residents here are dealing with addiction and that [smell] is one of the things that can trigger relapse." As part of the solution to hardcore homelessness, The City rents the 84-unit All-Star Hotel from owner Neal Patel and subleases it to the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, which has a long record of turning flophouses into managed hotels with supportive services. Under Care Not Cash, The City has taken over 12 hotels with 800 rooms. Neighbor Angela Sinicropi, who lives next to the All-Star, said she was "appalled" when she learned a pot club would be opening and that medical marijuana businesses, which are unregulated by The City, do not require any special licenses or notification process. Sinicropi said Patel misled her about the use, saying the newest tenant in the building would be "a medical clinic associated with UCSF." Patel said he didn't mislead anyone. "I told [the neighbors] it is going to be a medical facility, and it is," he said. The marijuana club, set to open March 25, will be called The Holistic Center, according to owner Craig Walker. Walker, a carpenter who holds a medical marijuana card to treat back pain, said the block was "full of hookers and graffiti" and the club would help clean it up. He said only people with city-issued medical marijuana cards would be eligible to buy pot. "We don't encourage drug addiction," he said. Walker said he picked the block partly because few children live on it and that "nine out of 10 people around here say 'right on' when we tell them what we're doing." But Micheal Piatakov, one of 60 residents who moved from the streets to the hotel seven months ago, called the dispensary "a bad idea." "Here I am trying to get back up on my feet," said Piatakov, who is trying to get work as a truck driver. "I don't want to be exposed to that." Tenderloin Housing Clinic director Randy Shaw said was "looking into" the matter. "We can't have a use that interferes with the residential use," said Shaw. "We don't want smoke wafting up." Patel said he would talk to the club owners about implementing a no-smoking rule at the club. Department of Human Services Director Trent Rhorer said he "shared the concerns about that sort of operation" and would look into the situation. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake