Pubdate: Tues, 13 Oct 2009 Source: Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, CA) Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.dailybulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/871 Author: Andrew Edwards, Staff Writer CITIES SET MARIJUANA POLICIES AS STATE, FEDERAL LAW COLLIDE San Bernardino City Councilman Chas Kelley is unambiguous about his opposition to allowing medical marijuana to be distributed in his city. "I just don't want to be a regional magnet," said Kelley, noting that nearby cities had prohibitions on the books before San Bernardino followed their lead last month. The nearly 13 years since California voters asked their government to legalize medical marijuana has not been enough time to settle debate on the proper use of the much loved and hated herb. In 2009, Inland Empire-based cannabis providers continue to exist in a kind of legal haze, where state law appears to sanction their activities while federal law makes marijuana as illegal as heroin. California voters cleared the path for medical marijuana in 1996 with the passage of Proposition 215. But voters up and down the state have also put into office politicians with very different views on medical cannabis. In San Bernardino County, the response to medical marijuana has generally been to just say "no" - or at least "not yet." Officials in several local cities have adopted bans or moratoriums aimed at keeping cannabis providers out of some towns. Other California cities have had different experiences, permitting marijuana providers or - as is the case in Oakland - creating a new business license tax intended to use medical marijuana as a means to balance the city's budget. Oakland Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan touts her city's regulatory process as a tool to keep dispensaries safe for patients whose doctors recommend marijuana. The political controversies that continue to surround medical marijuana, are in Kaplan's view, foolish. "It's a conflict that's hurting everybody, as well as being a waste of time, money and energy," she said. But Kaplan's views are at odds with a number of Inland Empire public officials and California law-enforcement leaders. A California Police Chiefs Association report on medicinal marijuana is but one voice of skepticism. The paper argues that federal law trumps Proposition 215 and that dispensaries, which should be deemed illegal, are likely targets for criminals looking to score pot or cash. "Marijuana dispensaries are commonly large money-making enterprises who will sell marijuana to most anyone who produces a physician's written recommendation for its medical use," the report reads. "These recommendations can be had by paying unscrupulous physicians a fee and claiming to have most any malady, even headaches." Several inland jurisdictions have adopted temporary bans that block cannabis providers until more detailed policies can be crafted. San Bernardino County extended its temporary ban in August, but some providers who set up operations before county officials acted are still dispensing marijuana. These facilities include the Inland Empire Patient Group in Bloomington and the San Bernardino Patients Association near Chino. Ryan Michaels and Jan Werner of Inland Empire Patient Group want to be treated as any other law-abiding enterprise. Michaels discusses marijuana policy with a libertarian's respect for old-fashioned federalism. To him, it makes no sense for government officials in California to bow down to federal law. "We have states that are allowed to try their own methods of solving their own problems," he said. He also contends that without a legal option, patients will buy from street dealers. Werner and Michaels said their operation is not a dispensary but a collective that allows marijuana patients to share crops that they cultivate. They provide marijuana on site but said they do not technically sell marijuana. Instead, they collect donations or contributions to cover production costs. In Los Angeles County, where hundreds of dispensaries are in operation, District Attorney Steve Cooley last week announced plans to step up prosecutions of providers that sell marijuana at a profit. Dennis Christy, assistant district attorney for San Bernardino County, said his officeis not planning the kinds of prosecutions being discussed in Los Angeles County. "We don't have the same number as L.A. does. That's one of the big differences," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr