Pubdate: Fri, 03 Dec 2010 Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) Copyright: 2010 The Desert Sun Contact: http://local2.thedesertsun.com/mailer/opinionwrap.php Website: http://www.mydesert.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Note: Does not accept LTEs from outside circulation area. Author: Blake Herzog, The Desert Sun DISPENSARY FILES CLAIM AGAINST CITY Rancho Mirage faces a legal claim from a marijuana dispensary it shut down while officials sift through conflicting legal signals on the issue. On Thursday, attorney Jeff Lake filed a $530,000 claim with the city on behalf of Desert Heart Collective, the first step toward filing a lawsuit. Rancho Mirage has 45 days to either pay or reject the claim, at which point the collective would be ready to sue, Lake said. But he added it still doesn't have to come to that. "We are working with the city diligently and are attempting to get an ordinance passed before the moratorium expires, which is Dec. 15," Lake said. That seemed unlikely after Thursday's City Council meeting, where members voted 4-1 to revisit proposed regulations for operating dispensaries in the city at their Jan. 20 meeting. Councilman Scott Hines voted no, saying they should try to resolve the matter sooner. Another council meeting is set for Dec. 14 for a vote on extending the dispensary moratorium, which Lake calls "illegal and unenforceable" in the claim. The council first adopted that moratorium Sept. 16 after discovering Desert Heart Collective had opened at 42-900 Bob Hope Drive, Suite 111. The claim is seeking revenue, wages and other costs Lakes said were lost when the dispensary was shut down because of the moratorium. Rancho Mirage had no law against dispensaries when Desert Heart applied for a business license. But the application was rejected on the grounds dispensaries weren't permitted by existing zoning. City Attorney Steve Quintanilla said during the council meeting some California cities had turned dispensaries away without banning them based on the federal prohibition on all pot usage. But a state 4th District Court of Appeals panel ruled Anaheim couldn't use federal law to justify its ban, and on Wednesday the state Supreme Court turned down that city's appeal of the decision. A statement in that ruling indicated the Supreme Court thinks it "unlikely" that cities can ban dispensaries outright, Quintanilla said. Two residents spoke in opposition to dispensaries at the meeting. Rick Smith said he isn't against medical marijuana for patients who truly need it. But he said ads in local weekly papers for existing dispensaries make it obvious they're going after a different market. "This one offers $25 off a consultation with a doctor. Why wouldn't you be going to your primary care physician?" Smith asked. Part-time resident Bob Garner said storefront dispensaries are charging patients too much for medical cannabis and should be banned, keeping distribution between medical marijuana collective members without storefronts. "Everything's in disarray except the dollars rolling in," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D