Pubdate: Sat, 23 Jan 2010 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2010 Bay Area News Group Contact: http://www.contracostatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/96 Author: Doug Oakley, Contra Costa Times Cited: Berkeley Patients Group http://www.berkeleypatientsgroup.com/ BERKELEY POT DISPENSARY'S PLANNED MOVE ANGERS DEVELOPER A medical marijuana outfit plans to move to the former Scharffen Berger chocolate building in booming West Berkeley, but a developer who owns 22 buildings in the area is warning the city that he will sue if that happens. Berkeley Patients Group, a nonprofit operating in the city for 10 years, wants to lease the 28,000-square-foot building at the corner of Heinz Avenue and Seventh Street next to the new Berkeley Bowl West supermarket. Wareham Development recently sent the city a letter threatening to sue, and the City Council will take up the matter during a closed session Tuesday. Andrew Neilly, a Wareham spokesman, said the company doesn't have a problem with medical marijuana but fears a dispensary in the neighborhood could drive away business. "Wareham has been involved in the city's quest to create a green technology corridor that would attract and maintain business, and we're not sure (medical marijuana) fits in there," Neilly said. "Imagine trying to get some clean-technology CEO to come in, and you point out there's a warehouse growing pot down the street." If Wareham chooses to sue, it might have to push to overturn Measure JJ, which voters approved in 2008. It allows a medical marijuana dispensary to be virtually anywhere in the city without a public hearing. Measure JJ limits city approval to an over-the-counter permit. "Our letter states that if a zoning certificate is issued, a legal action would be taken, and we think a challenge to (Measure JJ) would be successful," Neilly said. Berkeley Councilman Darryl Moore, whose district includes the proposed site, said he is "hoping to work with both groups to come up with an acceptable resolution" before any lawsuits are filed. Brad Senesac, a spokesman for Berkeley Patients Group, said he also hopes to get a meeting with anyone who is opposed to the nonprofit's move. "We hope to change any opposition by providing more information on how we operate," Senesac said. "We have strict rules and regulations and a good-neighbor policy. If you don't follow our good-neighbor policies, we ask you not to come back." The dispensary's current location on San Pablo Avenue is across the street from the Center for Early Intervention on Deafness, which receives a portion of the $300,000 the dispensary donates to organizations in the city each year, Senesac said. Measure JJ prohibits medical marijuana dispensaries in Berkeley from setting up shop within 1,000 feet of public schools, but it says nothing about private schools. The new site at Heinz and Seventh has two schools nearby, Ecole Bilingue de Berkeley and Aquatic Park Preschool. Officials at Ecole Bilingue said they were aware of Berkeley Patients Group's plan to move to the building and were "surprised" to learn the law protects public, but not private, schools. An Ecole Bilingue spokeswoman said it is too early to say whether the school will take a more public stand either for or against the dispensary's proposed new location. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake