Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jun 2006
Source: Daily Review, The (Hayward, CA)
Copyright: 2006 ANG Newspapers
Contact: http://www.insidebayarea.com/dailyreview/writealetter
Website: http://www.insidebayarea.com/dailyreview
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410
Author: Matt O'Brien, Staff Writer
Cited: Drug Policy Forum of California http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

MAYORAL RACE FRETS BACKERS OF POT CLINICS

Candidates Say Future of Marijuana in Hayward Not a Leading Priority

HAYWARD -- Medical marijuana proponents consider the Hayward mayoral 
election one of the "crucial" political races in California this 
Tuesday, though both mayoral hopefuls beg to differ.

"It's crucial because it could determine the fate of the medical 
cannabis dispensaries," said Dale Gieringer, director of the 
Oakland-based Drug Policy Forum of California.

Rival candidates Brian Schott and Mike Sweeney are "diametrically 
opposed" on the issue, Gieringer said.

And since the city's two permitted pot clubs are approaching the end 
of their municipal operating agreements, Gieringer said the next 
mayor could have a significant say on whether they stay or go.

The mayor could indeed have a say, but neither Schott nor Sweeney 
considers the issue a top priority for himself or most voters. And 
the positions they are espousing appear to be not so different.

In interviews, both said they would thoroughly review each club 
before voting to renew any permits. Schott, however, is explicitly 
opposed to the idea of having pot clubs in the city.

"I don't know why they have to be at these clandestine locations. It 
just leads to problems," Schott said. "They'd have to do a very good 
job of convincing me they should get their use permit renewed."

Schott alienated medical pot proponents at a campaign forum several 
weeks ago when he said, "This will probably cost me some votes, but I 
don't think Hayward should be in the medical marijuana business."

Sweeney, in contrast, said the city should follow state law, make 
sure there is no expansion in the number of dispensaries and regulate 
the existing two facilities carefully.

But when it comes to specifics, both men are promising a fairly 
hard-line approach. Sweeney said he would take a "real hard" look at 
the two dispensaries when their three-year agreements with the city 
expire on Dec. 31.

Both clubs, the Hayward Patients Resources Center and the Local 
Patients' Collaborative, are located on the same downtown stretch of 
Foothill Boulevard. Club owners did not return calls for comment Thursday.

Gieringer said his organization's views on the Hayward candidates are 
based on what local dispensary workers and patients gathered from 
watching candidates debate one another at forums. Although the 
activist group does not make formal endorsements, it offers advice on 
local elections on its Web site.

The commentary paints Sweeney as reasoned and Schott as hostile to 
the group's cause. Both candidates said they were not contacted by 
the group. The other elections described as "crucial" are in Oakland 
and San Diego County.

In fact, it may be that neither Schott nor Sweeney will have enough 
political heft, if elected, to engineer any major changes to the 
city's current policy.

The mayor's vote is equal to the vote of any of the six members of 
the Hayward City Council, and so far those council members have been 
almost unanimous on decisions allowing the two pot clubs to operate.

Five candidates are contesting two open seats on the council, but 
only one of them, Hank Quintel, has said he opposes pot clubs downtown.

"I see no purpose for these marijuana clubs," Quintel said at a forum.

The Drug Policy Forum believes incumbent Councilman Kevin Dowling and 
challenger Gary Steinberger are "most strongly supportive of medical 
marijuana." Dowling is a past recipient of campaign contributions 
from pot clubs and has said at a forum that both facilities are "well 
run." The other two candidates, Robert Lopez and incumbent Councilman 
Matt Jimenez, are considered by the group to be in a more vague, middle ground.

But many of the group's views are inaccurate. The same Web site 
states that Assembly candidate Mary Hayashi of Castro Valley is a 
registered nurse and strongly supportive of medical marijuana.

Hayashi is not a registered nurse. It states that her challenger, 
Alameda County Fire Chief Bill McCammon of Pleasanton, "who is 
supported by police, is opposed" to medical marijuana. Both Hayashi 
and McCammon have received endorsements from law enforcement 
individuals and organizations, as have Dowling, Lopez, Jimenez, 
Schott and Sweeney.

It states that "medical marijuana advocates have lacked a working 
majority on the Board of Supervisors due to lack of support from 
incumbent Supervisor (Gail) Steele." In fact, county supervisors 
spent two years developing a plan that resulted this year in the 
approval of three medical marijuana clinic permits in unincorporated 
areas. Steele joined other board members in developing and approving the plan.

The site states that Steele's challenger, Union City Councilman 
Richard Valle, "has been a consistent supporter of medical cannabis 
dispensaries in Union City." There are no dispensaries in Union City, 
though Valle has consistently served as the minority vote trying to 
approve them.

If officials in Hayward someday adopt Union City's no-dispensary 
model, as some advocates fear, it would take a majority of elected 
officials, not just a new mayor and two council members.

"The council has to decide," said Hayward City Manager Jesus Armas. 
"Absent any action, (the agreements) expire."

Armas said there have been some problems involving the clinics, 
including robberies at one of them.

Frustration with the glut of tattoo parlors downtown, and the social 
problems critics have associated with them, caused the council to 
deny a permit to a proposed new parlor late last year. If similar 
frustrations arise at the end of this year, officials predict it 
could influence how the council votes on renewing pot club permits. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake