Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jan 2009 Source: Oakley Press (CA) Copyright: 2009 Brentwood Press & Publishing Corporation Contact: http://oakleypress.com/contactForm.cfm?o=1 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4922 Website: http://www.presspublications.com/ Author: Dave Roberts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) OAKLEY SAYS NOPE TO DOPE DISPENSARIES Oakley cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy who use marijuana to suppress nausea and stimulate their appetite will continue to have to drive out of town to legally pick up their leafy medicine. The council at its Dec. 9 meeting unanimously agreed to ban medical marijuana dispensaries in Oakley, based on problems the pot clubs have caused in other cities. Residents with a doctor's authorization will still be able to possess and grow their own, however. "This in no way impacts people's right to have marijuana or grow it, consistent with what state law allows and requires. It simply means you cannot set up shop," City Attorney Alison Barratt-Green told the council. Oakley's ordinance follows a similar ban enacted in Brentwood, Contra Costa County and numerous cities throughout California. "We continue to hear stories of the various problems that occur with these businesses, including crime, blight," said Barratt-Green. Although growing and possession of marijuana are allowed for doctor-approved patients in California, "The attorney general's position is that medical marijuana dispensaries are not covered under the Compassionate Use Act." None of the council members commented on the issue before voting to ban pot clubs in Oakley. Police Chief Chris Thorsen, in a written report to the council last year before it adopted a temporary ban, came down strongly against the dispensaries. He cited numerous problems, including increased loitering and smoking of marijuana around dispensaries, robberies of dispensary customers and the dispensaries themselves, increased incidents of people driving while stoned, sales of marijuana to people without a doctor's certificate, reselling of marijuana, sales of other drugs in or near the dispensary and increased property crime in the area. For two years Thorsen supervised the sheriff's gangs and drugs task force, which often encountered people who had cannabis club cards who were either in possession of marijuana for their own use or were selling it on street corners. "When asked about their ailments, many were unable to provide any more detail than a 'bad back' or 'chronic pain,'" Thorsen states in his report. "These contacts have led me to believe that these subjects have obtained a cannabis club card strictly for the purpose of insulating themselves from prosecution. "It is my belief that the secondary impacts associated with marijuana dispensaries are real. Based upon our current staffing levels, it would be nearly impossible for the Oakley Police Department to effectively mitigate or monitor increased criminal activity or negative impacts to the quality of life our citizens enjoy." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin