Pubdate: Sun, 5 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: Marcel Honore, The Desert Sun
Cited: Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project http://marijuananews.drupalcafe.com/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries

SPECIAL DELIVERY: MEDICAL MARIJUANA

As Officials Grapple With How to Regulate Dispensaries, Access to 
Drug Getting Easier

During the past four years, the Coachella Valley's elected leaders 
have limited and even banned medical marijuana dispensaries. But that 
hasn't stopped medical pot access from expanding in the valley in 
bold, creative ways.

At least eight medical marijuana "delivery services" have opened 
across the valley during the past year and a half to cater to local 
patients. The services openly advertise on "WeedMaps.com."

The operators of these services, who say they verify their customers 
as medical pot patients before making deliveries, are based in Palm 
Springs, Cathedral City, Rancho Mirage, Palm Desert and La Quinta.

"You don't have to get off the couch. You don't have to waste your 
gas" retrieving medical marijuana at a dispensary, explained Indio 
resident David Curtis, who launched The Big 8th Delivery in La Quinta 
two months ago.

They're less expensive to set up and run than a brick-and-mortar pot 
dispensary, but don't generate nearly as much revenue, local operators say.

The delivery services are especially useful to seriously ill, 
homebound patients, Curtis said.

Most did not want to say where they received or stored the medical 
pot they delivered. One Palm Springs-based operator said he 
cultivated his own. Curtis said his supply came from a medical 
marijuana patient who has extra to provide.

Another advantage to delivery services is they don't attract nearly 
as much attention from authorities as the dispensaries do, they said.

That doesn't mean the valley's local governments sanction the 
deliveries, however.

La Quinta City Attorney Kathy Jenson said the city's pot ordinance, 
which bans any facility that "makes available or distributes medical 
marijuana," covers delivery services, too.

But city regulations don't faze Curtis.

"I don't ever factor that in," he said.

Business Expanding

Seven desert cities have banned medical pot dispensaries, but new 
storefronts continue to appear in unincorporated parts of the valley, 
where the laws governing medical pot aren't firmly established.

At least three new storefronts have opened in Thousand Palms while 
Riverside County sorts out its own medical marijuana policy.

One Rancho Mirage-based dispensary filed a $530,000 claim this week 
against the city, contending the city's medical pot moratorium is 
illegal and demanding they be allowed to reopen.

At least five unsanctioned dispensaries continue to serve customers 
in Palm Springs, openly challenging that city's strict medical pot 
ordinance by arguing they're allowed to operate under state law.

Meanwhile, Riverside County officials are debating how to address the 
fast-growing number of medical pot facilities in unincorporated areas.

Karen Esposito, chair of the Thousand Palms Community Council, said a 
dispensary owner in Palm Springs recently asked her about expanding 
his operation into the centrally located area.

"I didn't know we had that much of a calling here for it," Esposito 
said Thursday. "We already have three." Esposito could not remember 
the name of the dispensary owner who contacted her.

Riverside County prohibits medical marijuana dispensaries, according 
to the office of county counsel. But that hasn't stopped the number 
of storefronts in unincorporated areas from more than tripling in the 
past year.

There were 14 such storefronts in 2009, county officials say. 
Presently, they estimate there are 47, including the three new 
Thousand Palms facilities.

Part of what's led to the county's medical marijuana boom are 
"vaguely written laws" on the state level, according to an Oct. 27 
letter from County Counsel Pamela J. Walls to The Desert Sun.

Many storefronts claim only to be nonprofit collectives whose members 
cultivate marijuana just for themselves, as allowed by the state 
attorney general's guidelines.

Those claims make it tough for local law enforcement to determine 
whether they're actually collectives or illegal dispensaries, Wall's 
letter stated.

The Riverside County Board of Supervisors ordered staff in September 
to draft a new ordinance that would regulate collectives, too.

But at least two supervisors, including Supervisor John Benoit, said 
during their regular meeting this week that they'd like to see the 
ordinance ban collectives altogether, according to Benoit's chief of 
staff, Michelle DeArmond.

Recently approved bans on dispensaries in Los Angeles and Orange 
counties helped change the supervisors' minds because they believe 
many of those storefronts to the west now will move to Riverside 
County, DeArmond said.

When local governments ban medical pot outlets, "they turn it into 
this wild west show where collectives open up illegally and delivery 
services abound," said Lanny Swerdlow, director of the Palm 
Springs-based pro-legalization Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project.

"They just open up because people have the right to this," Swerdlow 
said. "If people want something, they're going to get it. By this 
refusal to deal ... you cause all these crazy, incredible stupid problems."

Debate Continues

Palm Springs' medical marijuana ordinance allows only three selected 
dispensaries to operate.

However, at least five additional unsanctioned dispensaries continue 
to operate illegally.

The city has been locked in a legal dispute with several of those 
unsanctioned dispensaries, including The Holistic Collective and 
California Collective of Choice.

City Attorney Doug Holland did not return requests for comment on the 
latest with those legal battles.

Patients say the drug, allowed for medicinal use under state law but 
prohibited under federal law, helps to ease pain associated with 
cancer, arthritis and migraines more effectively than traditional medications.

Opponents of dispensaries generally worry the operations will attract 
crime, while local advocates say as many as 12,000 patients in the 
Coachella Valley rely on dispensaries and delivery services to help 
reduce severe pain and nausea.

As the debate continues, "the only people who are winning in this 
whole thing are the lawyers," quipped Swerdlow, of MAPP.  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake