Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jul 2006
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2006 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Jessee McKinley
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

MARIJUANA FIGHT ENVELOPS FISHERMAN'S WHARF

SAN FRANCISCO - The newest attraction planned for Fisherman's Wharf, 
San Francisco's most popular tourist destination, has no sign, no 
advertisements and not even a scrap of sourdough. Yet everyone seems 
to think that the new business, the Green Cross, will be a hit, 
drawing customers from all over the region to sample its aromatic wares.

For some, that is exactly the problem.

The Green Cross is a cannabis club, one of scores that sell marijuana 
to patients with a doctor's note. They have sprouted around 
California in the decade since the passage of Proposition 215, which 
legalized the use and sale of marijuana to those suffering from 
chronic pain, illness or infirmity. San Francisco, a hot spot in the 
AIDS epidemic, voted overwhelmingly in favor of the proposition in 
1996 and has about 30 clubs, serving some 25,000 patients and caregivers.

But none of San Francisco's medical marijuana dispensaries, as they 
are formally known, have been located in places anywhere as popular 
as Fisherman's Wharf, where most people come to enjoy chowder, 
Ghirardelli chocolate or cable cars. Now, with the opening of the new 
club just weeks away, some residents and merchants are fighting to keep it out.

"The city is saturated with pot clubs," said T. Wade Randlett, the 
president of SF SOS, a quality-of-life group that opposes the planned 
club. "Fisherman's Wharf is a tourism attraction, and this is not the 
kind of tourism we're trying to attract."

Emboldened by a series of regulations passed last fall by the city's 
Board of Supervisors, some neighborhoods are resisting new marijuana 
dispensaries, which they say attract crime and dealers bent on 
reselling the drugs. In the debate over the new rules last year, 
several neighborhoods successfully lobbied to be exempted from having 
new clubs.

Other neighborhoods managed to get clubs shuttered, including a 
previous version of the Green Cross, which was forced out of a 
storefront in the city's Mission District after neighbors said they 
had seen a rise in drug dealing, traffic problems and petty crime, a 
charge the Green Cross denies.

The proposed dispensary comes at a time when medical marijuana's 
legal standing is murky. Last summer, the United States Supreme Court 
upheld federal authority to prosecute the possession and use of 
marijuana for medical purposes, despite voter-approved laws allowing 
medical marijuana in California and nearly a dozen other states.

That decision prompted California to stop issuing identification 
cards to patients, for fear of opening state workers up to federal 
charges of abetting a crime. (Patients can still be issued cards by 
San Francisco and other California cities.)

Clubs in San Francisco now must go through a permit process, which 
includes public hearings, and the proposed dispensary at Fisherman's 
Wharf is the first to have done so. A hundred people packed a 
neighborhood meeting on June 13, peppering the club's owner, Kevin 
Reed, with questions. Outside, fliers were handed out imploring 
residents to "Stop Marijuana Store!" and listing the planned club's 
proximity to schools and hotels.

Elizabeth Naughton Moore, 33, who lives about a block from the 
planned location, said she dreaded the thought of walking her 
18-month-old son anywhere near it.

"Anyone with a modicum of common sense can see this is not an 
appropriate location," Ms. Moore said. "I understand patients need to 
have access to it, but I think with 30 locations, they have options."

All of this upsets Mr. Reed, a soft-spoken, sharply dressed 
32-year-old who founded the first Green Cross in 2004. He said he had 
spent tens of thousands of dollars on security and other expenses to 
make the new club a model for marijuana dispensaries.

"I've changed so much and brought so much professionalism to the 
movement, but the public can't see that," Mr. Reed said. "I took it 
from the 1960's" into the 21st century.

The unopened dispensary at Fisherman's Wharf - located in a 
nondescript storefront tucked under a weary-looking bed-and-breakfast 
- - has all the trappings of modern retail: high-speed Internet access, 
high-tech security cameras and high-end merchandise. An ounce of 
marijuana will sell for $300, and Mr. Reed's outlet will have a 
whopping 55 varieties. Framed photographs of San Francisco scenes 
adorn the club's black walls, and the glass-topped counters gleam 
under track lighting.

"I would love to offer it out of a hospital, I would love to offer it 
out of Walgreen's, but the truth is, they're not allowing that," said 
Mr. Reed, who uses marijuana to treat a back injury. "So somebody has 
to open a place like this and show that it can be done right."

What that includes, Mr. Reed said, is abiding by a batch of new 
rules. Chief among those is a stipulation that forbids clubs from 
opening within 1,000 feet of a school or a community center. Mr. Reed 
said that the tourism appeal of Fisherman's Wharf had nothing to do 
with his decision, but that the location met the requirements of the new rules.

"This wasn't our original location, nor was it our ideal location," 
Mr. Reed said, adding that he would not be selling marijuana to 
tourists, only to those with doctors' notes. "But it was really hard 
finding legal areas."

One of those legal areas happened to be at the wharf, which is zoned 
primarily for commercial use. But Christopher Martin, whose family 
owns the Cannery, a three-story retail and restaurant complex a block 
from the proposed club, said that the neighborhood had been trying to 
become more upscale and residential, and that a pot club should not 
figure into the plans.

"We are trying to build a more stable, more interesting community 
here," Mr. Martin said.

What local merchants say they fear most is the clientele's smoking in 
the neighborhood, congregating on sidewalks or clogging streets with 
double-parked cars. Mr. Reed said that his security personnel would 
prevent loitering and that 16 security cameras would constantly 
monitor the club and the area.

"Criminals that deal drugs don't want to come into a store where they 
are being recorded," Mr. Reed said.

The pot clubs themselves, which are usually cash businesses with 
ample amounts of product, are sometimes targets of crime. Four in San 
Francisco were robbed in 2005, and last weekend, a club downtown was 
robbed during the Gay Pride Parade.

And while the law was passed with seriously ill patients in mind, 
like those with AIDS and cancer, some critics say that now even 
people with commonplace aches and pains can get a doctor's recommendation.

But what both sides can agree on - in classic San Francisco fashion - 
is that the problem is really Oakland's fault. In 2004, Oakland, the 
smaller, less glamorous city across the bay, banned many of its 
cannabis clubs, driving some to reopen in San Francisco. Other cities 
in the state have also instituted bans or new restrictions.

The rising neighborhood opposition to the clubs also stands in 
striking juxtaposition to the personal political beliefs of many in 
San Francisco, a city that prides itself on a progressive attitude.

"Every single person I've ever spoke to and every meeting I've ever 
went to, if there was any opposition at all, the first words out of 
their mouth is, 'I voted for this,' " Mr. Reed said.

Mr. Martin concurred. "Both the merchants and the residents - though 
philosophically we don't have a problem with medicinal marijuana 
being available, we all voted for it - we think customers are going 
to be better served in another location," he said. "We just think 
it's the wrong time, wrong place."

Mr. Reed has assured city leaders and Mr. Martin that he would be a 
good neighbor, and he hopes to open in August if his permit is approved.

For their part, tourists seemed unaware, and largely unbothered, that 
they might soon be wandering past a cannabis club. "I think it's a 
pretty eclectic neighborhood anyway," said Tony Accardo, 54, a 
financial analyst from Dallas. "My only concern would be if it 
attracted clientele that might affect the neighborhood. You know, riffraff."
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake