Pubdate: Tue, 22 Dec 2009 Source: Modesto Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2009 The Modesto Bee Contact: http://www.modbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/271 POT LAW CREATING A CONFUSING CLOUD In 1996, when voters approved Proposition 215, the medical marijuana initiative, most Californians did not envision what's playing out in Arcata. As reported in a Sacramento Bee story that appeared on our front page Monday, this Humboldt County town has become the legal pot capital of the country. Hundreds of medical marijuana growers supply dozens of cooperatives that dispense the drug. It has become the financial mainstay of a community where logging and fishing once dominated. Voters did not expect to open the door for "pot docs." These are physicians who charge as much as $250 per evaluation before handing over a recommendation that allows a patient to grow and use pot legally. While some patients are sick and use pot to relieve suffering, clearly others are seeking a legal way to get stoned. Voters did not anticipate the rise of medical marijuana grow houses and with them home invasion robberies. Voters had no way of predicting that local councils and boards would outlaw pot dispensaries, leaving patients unclear on where they can legally obtain marijuana, even with a bonafide need and a physician's prescription. Today, 13 years after the initiative passed and more than a year after Attorney General Jerry Brown issued new guidelines on how to interpret and enforce the Compassionate Use Act, confusion abounds. The initiative legalized marijuana use for patients who suffered from a variety of illnesses including AIDS, chronic pain, arthritis and "any other illness for which marijuana provides relief." That last phrase opened the door to everything from the common cold to a hangnail, and profiteers have marched through it. The attorney general's guidelines say people can't sell it for a profit, but that doesn't prevent physicians from making millions issuing marijuana recommendations and dispensaries from amassing sizable fortunes selling pot over the counter. It does not prevent the Oakland City Council from approving an ordinance that charges that city's pot dispensaries $18 in tax for every $1,000 of medical marijuana sold. The current confusing state of our marijuana laws stymies law enforcement, corrupts the medical profession and confounds elected officials. Are pot dispensaries legitimate businesses that can be taxed or not? The way the proposition was drafted makes it difficult for lawmakers to regulate this budding industry (excuse the pun). It also makes it difficult to amend the law without going back to the voters. It's time to do that. The public in California faces three options: - - Legalize marijuana, then regulate it and tax it; - - Tighten up and clarify Proposition 215; or - - Repeal the proposition. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D