Pubdate: Sun, 20 Sep 2009 Source: Napa Valley Register (CA) Copyright: 2009 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://www.napavalleyregister.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/736 Author: Kevin Courtney Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries IS POT RIGHT FOR NAPA? As City Considers Medical Marijuana; Sebastopol Shows How It Is Done These are tough times in Sebastopol. Two auto dealers have closed. Plants that once processed Gravenstein apples sit empty. Amid this economic wreckage, Peace in Medicine is a roaring success. Opening in 2007, Peace in Medicine will reach 10,000 customers and generate $5 million in revenues this year, requiring the opening of a second storefront. What is Peace in Medicine selling that the public is clamoring to buy? Medical marijuana. With the Obama administration ending the threat of federal raids, medical cannabis clinics have exploded in California. As part of that trend, the city of Napa is drafting rules that would allow marijuana dispensaries. In the popular imagination, a pot clinic is a funky place with over-stuffed couches and hippie beads hanging in the doorway. A sweet-smelling haze fills the air. In testimony before the Napa City Council this summer, local residents touted Peace in Medicine as the kind of pot dispensary that Napa could be proud of. Instead of seediness, a clinical atmosphere worthy of mainstream medicine. Instead of furtiveness, a desire to be a full participant in community life. With a population of 7,800, Sebastopol is a city in western Sonoma County one-tenth Napa's size. If Napa is blue collar with growing wine country sophistication, Sebastopol is decidedly counter-cultural. Peace in Medicine hides in plain sight on a busy roadway at the front of a small commercial center. The clinic rents a building last occupied by a failed Ford dealership. Outside the front door, a "safety host" monitors the parking lot. Patients must show a California photo ID before being buzzed through a locked door. The waiting room is as antiseptic and clinical as Queen of the Valley Medical Center, but with a sound system cranking out a techno beat. The man in charge is Robert Jacob, a bearded 32-year-old with a zealous belief in the benefits of medical cannabis. "It's safer and more effective than just about all pharmaceuticals," Jacob said. "I believe in natural medicine rather than Western medicine whenever possible." Jacob signaled the opening of another locked door, admitting his visitor to a sales room where a cornucopia of cannabis products were on display in glass cases. Marijuana buds called "Moonstone," recommended for "spacey sedation, evening appropriate," were on sale, $54 for an eighth of an ounce. For the same price, "Lemon Skunk" offered "lifted euphoria, daytime appropriate." For those who want to eat, not smoke, their medicinal relief, Peace in Medicine offered cannabis in cookies, lozenges and bars of both dark and milk chocolate. To promote sales on slow Mondays, customers who spend $50 or more spin a wheel to win prizes, including free massages, a $5 joint or a cannabis chocolate bar. Jacob, who has used medical marijuana since he was a teenager, said he wanted Peace in Medicine to be the poster child for successful cannabis clinics. He envisioned a clinic that would be friendly, secure, with a level of accountability and transparency that would put patients and the community at ease. "When I was a patient at dispensaries, I never felt good about it," he said of clinics in other cities. Peace in Medicine, representing a coalition of local residents, beat out two other applicants for Sebastopol's first medical cannabis permit. Peace in Medicine promised to do everything the city wanted and more, Jacob said. Profits from medicinal marijuana subsidize an adjacent "healing center," which offers a daily lineup of inexpensive yoga, acupuncture and massage. At the city's annual Apple Blossom parade, Peace in Medicine sponsors a float. Peace in Medicine staffers attend chamber of commerce mixers. Last year the clinic's community donations totaled $100,000, Jacob said. Upside-Down Town? When the Sebastopol City Council decided to allow cannabis clinics, viewing medical marijuana as a "social justice issue and a health issue," Police Chief Jeffrey Weaver remembers receiving a warning from a friend in Mendocino County. "It will turn your town upside down," the friend said. That hasn't happened, Weaver said. Peace in Freedom runs a tight operation. "There's been no vandalism. There's been no theft. There's no loitering. There are no stoned outbursts from patients," he said. On Monday, 30 steps from Peace in Medicine's front door, Paula Downing was watching her 4-year-old grandson play on a toy locomotive. Asked her opinion of Peace in Medicine, Downing said it must be operating OK since the local newspaper never carries negative news about it. Asked where Peace in Medicine was located, Downing said she had no idea. Told it was just behind her, she let out a hearty laugh. Sebastopol Councilman Larry Robinson said he was the "most skeptical" member of the council when the dispensary opened. He feared what could go wrong that city officials hadn't anticipated. "We've had none of the kinds of complaints that some people imagined," Robinson said. "I've done a major shift in my thinking." While Weaver considers Peace in Medicine one of the best-run clinics in the state, he has a lawman's reservations about the "murky" California laws that allow them. "I do believe in medical marijuana, but with many more restrictions than now," Weaver said. "I know the vast majority of people using medical marijuana could be better served by other medicines or don't need it at all." A substantial number of Peace in Medicine patients are obtaining marijuana for recreational toking, not for medical needs, Weaver suspects. In candid conversations, some clinic customers have admitted this, he said. This loophole isn't with Peace in Medicine's operation, but with state law, Weaver said. A medical doctor is allowed to write a marijuana recommendation for any illness for which the physician thinks marijuana can provide relief. When state voters passed Prop. 215 in 1996, they believed they were authorizing marijuana relief for seriously ill patients who were wasting away, the chief said. Nowadays, anyone asserting headaches, menstrual cramps or anxiety can get a physician's authorization, Weaver said. Writing marijuana authorizations has become the core of some doctors' practices. Physicians advertise their services on the Internet, he said. Councilman Robinson doesn't doubt that some patients are obtaining pot just to get high, "but they're only damaging themselves," he said. "I'm convinced that most of the patients there are really using it for medical purposes." Amanda Leary, who teaches yoga at Peace in Medicine's healing center, said she had used medical marijuana for menstrual discomfort. "You know you're buying from a reputable source," said Leary, who described other cannabis clinics as "average at best," without Peace in Medicine's emphasis on patient education and holistic healing. By learning to use acupuncture and other herbal products, she no longer needs marijuana, Leary said. James Ketchum, a retired 77-year-old psychiatrist, said he gets medical marijuana from Peace in Medicine to cope with severe insomnia. "Just a few puffs on a marijuana cigarette allows me to sleep through the night," he said. Marijuana works better than other sleep products, without side effects, Ketchum said. Unfortunately, the expense isn't covered byMedicare, he said. Jim, a 52-year-old salesman who declined to give his full name, smokes marijuana before bed for insomnia. He once got medical pot from a clinic in Los Angeles that was "dark and dingy and more like going back in the alley." Jim said he liked the fact that Peace in Medicine certifies its product as organic. "If you're using it as a medicine, you don't want anything with sprays and toxic stuff," he said. A Growing Business The biggest challenge in opening Peace in Medicine was finding a landlord willing to rent to a cannabis operation, Jacob said. Some 50 landlords turned him down, often at the urging of their lenders and insurers, before a Ford dealership folded and an owner had a change of heart, he said. Sebastopol's ordinance restricts clinics to commercial areas, at least 500 feet from schools and parks, which reduced the pool of potential sites, he said. The city recently allowed Peace in Medicine to open a second dispensary. Finding a place to rent was much easier this time, Jacob said. Because of the economy, there are more vacancies. Peace in Medicine has a track record. The new clinic will be next to a Starbucks. In nearly two years of operation, Peace in Medicine has had only one criminal event -- a night break-in last May. "Thankfully, there was nobody there," said Weaver, noting that one burglar, according to the video recording, carried a shotgun. "I guess they thought there would be bales of pot. They brought lawn and leaf bags," the chief said. Because the city requires all cash and marijuana to be locked in a vault at night. The burglars got nothing, he said. To put the burglary at Peace in Medicine in perspective, Weaver noted that so far this year his city has had robberies at gunpoint of both a bank and an armored car. Legal cannabis clinics are a way to take away profits from illegal marijuana growers, Jacob said. His clinic obtains all of its medicine from patients who are encouraged to grow plants at home and sell back, he said. Because of Peace in Medicine's reputation, nine groups from Napa have contacted him for advice and possible partnerships once the city adopts rules for permitting cannabis clinics, Jacob said. A Napa clinic should be run by Napans, Jacob said, but he might be willing to act as a consultant. Napa Councilman Mark van Gorder, whose mother lives in Sebastopol, said he intends to tour Peace in Medicine and interview Chief Weaver before the clinic issue comes back to the Napa council next spring. Addressing the Napa Police Department's security concerns will be essential before he would vote to allow a marijuana clinic in Napa, van Gorder said. As the California public becomes increasingly comfortable with marijuana, Councilman Robinson predicts that cannabis will soon become legal for both pleasure and pain. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has invited Californians to debate this issue, noting that taxing marijuana could raise billions of dollars for the state treasury. Sebastopol City Manager Jack Griffin said Peace in Medicine may pay as much as $50,000 in sales tax this year, putting it among the city's top 10 payers. "In this economy, there aren't many businesses that are growing," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake