Pubdate: Wed, 8 Apr 2009 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2009 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Shaun Bishop, Daily News Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California) SAN MATEO COUNTY SOON MAY START REGULATING MEDICAL MARIJUANA CLUBS A long-awaited San Mateo County ordinance that requires medical marijuana clubs to obtain operating licenses and follow certain conditions got the nod of a subcommittee Tuesday despite some concerns raised by local cannabis distributors. The ordinance, drafted by the county counsel's office, adds new requirements for medical marijuana cooperatives or collectives -- two of which recently opened up in the unincorporated North Fair Oaks area near Redwood City. "I'm very much in favor of having marijuana available to people who need it for their health, and I think having an ordinance like this makes us make sure that it's done in a safe practice," said San Mateo County Supervisor Carole Groom, who along with Supervisor Rose Jacobs Gibson sits on a board of supervisors subcommittee that deals with health issues. The full board could review the proposed ordinance April 28. Medicinal marijuana was legalized in California in 1996 through Proposition 215, but federal law still prohibits cannabis possession. The county's ordinance comes more than 18 months after federal agents raided three medical marijuana dispensaries in San Mateo and shut them down after the district attorney's office alerted the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration that they were operating illegally. After those raids, supervisors called for a model ordinance regulating marijuana businesses that cities could adopt. The San Mateo City Council on Monday adopted an ordinance almost identical to the county's proposed one. "We care about all the businesses in our community and we want to make sure they're all safe and that we actually have some oversight," Jacobs Gibson said. Under the ordinance, each cooperative would have to get a license from the county that comes with several conditions, among them that the cooperative must operate at least 1,000 feet away from a school, recreation center or youth center; install an alarm system and window bars; and refrain from selling cultivated marijuana or exchanging anything of value for marijuana. Some of those requirements concern Jhonrico Carrnshimba, the president and CEO of Universal Healthcare Cooperative Corporation, a North Fair Oaks cooperative that began distributing marijuana to patients in February. Carrnshimba, who helped run one of the San Mateo clubs that was shut down, said he has made a concerted effort to make his club a true cooperative, establishing a five-member board of directors and a membership sign-up process and offering other services such as yoga classes and counseling. He said he hopes to discuss changing parts of the ordinance, including its prohibition of edible products laced with marijuana, which he said could affect cancer patients who need cannabis but cannot smoke it. "We'd like for (the county) to work with us to do an ordinance," Carrnshimba said. "They're not really looking out for the patients." Robert Simmons, a Belmont resident who says he runs a "mobile dispensary" that distributes marijuana to patients, told the two supervisors that the prohibition against selling cultivated marijuana would have the effect of "ostracizing patients and forcing them to buy marijuana outside of the county." But Chief Deputy County Counsel Penny Bennett said selling marijuana is already a violation of state law. She said the county's ordinance is not about abolishing medical marijuana facilities in the county but about "regulating them and making it safe." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake