Pubdate: Tue, 23 Jun 2009 Source: San Bernardino Sun (CA) Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.sbsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1417 Author: Joe Nelson, Staff Writer COUNTY SUPERVISORS OK MEDICAL MARIJUANA PLAN Medical-marijuana advocates scored a win on Tuesday - but they won't be able to relish the victory for months. A years-long saga ended when the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to implement a program for medical-marijuana identification cards. But it will be nearly two months or even longer before the county begins issuing those identification cards to people with doctors' prescriptions. "Our concern is seeing that the medicine gets out to our patients," said Ron Downey, a proponent of medical marijuana who spoke at Tuesday's board meeting, along with a half-dozen others. The proposed ordinance authorizing the program will go before the board again July 14 for adoption, and the program should be in full swing 30 days after that. If all goes according to plan, patients can then start submitting applications for identification cards, said Lynne Fischer, county spokeswoman. It will take considerably longer, however, for patients in the county to start seeing dispensaries opening up nearby. That's because the board also imposed a temporary ban on dispensaries until the county's development code can be updated to include provisions and design standards for them. "That doesn't prohibit them (patients) from the other options they have under the law," Fischer said. Under state law, medical-marijuana patients can grow their own plants - - up to six mature plants or 12 immature plants - or get their medicine at dispensaries in other counties, Fischer said. Julie Rynerson Rock, director of the county's Land Use Services Department, said she will appear before the board on or before Aug. 4 with an update. The news didn't sit well with medical-marijuana proponents. Downey urged the county to seek input from the advocates on how to approach the issues and logistics surrounding dispensaries. Under the county program, caregivers and non Medi-Cal patients will pay $166 per identification card per year, and Medi-Cal patients will pay $83 per card per year. The county Health Department will run the program six hours a day Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Hours of operation will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a one-hour break for lunch between noon and 1 p.m. The health department expects to serve 250 to 300 patients and caregivers a year, and those wanting to pick up an application can do so by dropping by the department's main office at 351 N. Mountain View Ave., San Bernardino. The U.S. Supreme Court on May 18 declined to hear a lawsuit filed jointly by San Bernardino and San Diego counties challenging California's Compassionate Use Act. The two counties argued that federal law outlawing marijuana possession and use under any circumstance pre-empted the state law, which allows for the cultivation, use, possession and transport of the drug per a physician's recommendation. It ended a three-year legal battle and opened the door for patients to get their identification cards, which means that police will no longer have grounds to seize a patient's marijuana when found in their possession. For more information, call the San Bernardino County Public Health Department at (800) 782-4264. Applications will be distributed by appointment only. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr