Pubdate: Mon, 01 Mar 2010 Source: Fort Collins Coloradoan (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Fort Collins Coloradoan Contact: http://www.coloradoan.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.coloradoan.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1580 Author: Michael Smith, Ph.D. Note: Michael Smith, Ph.D., is a licensed marriage and family therapist and Presbyterian clergyman who lives in Fort Collins. He is the director of Clinical Supervision and Training for the Community Reach Center, the public mental health facility for Adams County in Thornton. DISPENSARIES THREATEN QUALITY OF LIFE The recent exponential proliferation of medical marijuana dispensaries, or MMDs, in Fort Collins (98 unregulated dispensaries, at last count) threatens to undermine the quality of life for all of Fort Collins' residents, especially children and young adults. I use as my point of reference the "quality of life" issue because Mayor Doug Hutchinson and City Manager Darin Atteberry each addressed it repeatedly in their January 2010 State of the City address. Both described Fort Collins' quality of life as "second-to-none." Also, Atteberry recalled that in 2006 Money Magazine "... declared Fort Collins the No. 1 best place to live in America." And Mayor Hutchinson said: "... we're passionate about creating a vibrant, world-class community." If this is a primary commitment of the mayor and city manager, my question to them, to every City Council member and to you, the residents of Fort Collins, is this: In your heart-of-hearts, do you honestly believe that having 98 unregulated MMDs and a burgeoning marijuana industry in Fort Collins contributes in a positive way to creating "... a vibrant, world class community"? Can you in conscience look your own children and grandchildren in the eye and say to them: "In 2010, we had the opportunity to carefully evaluate what was best for you and this community, and we decided that it was in your best interest, and in the best interest of the city, for us to allow this current situation with the medical marijuana industry to continue as it is." And further: "We honestly believe that there is absolutely no evidence that the usage of marijuana by some adults for so-called medicinal purposes has any direct relationship to your own, your friends' or adults' increased usage for recreational purposes." Also: "We also believe in our heart-of-hearts that it is more important to promote a 'live-and-let-live' philosophy in Fort Collins than it is to place reasonable regulations and limits on the number and business practices of so-called MMDs. We honestly believe it genuinely contributes to the positive quality of life of Fort Collins' residents that marijuana grows should continue to be allowed in community neighborhoods, that MMDs should be allowed to operate 24 hours a day, without restriction, that those who operate MMDs should continue to be subject to no background checks whatsoever, that they should be allowed to operate right next to public schools, as they do in neighboring Loveland, and that the marijuana industry as a whole should be left to regulate itself. After all, they certainly have the best interest of our children and grandchildren, and our overall quality of life at heart." If you can look your children and grandchildren in the eye and in conscience say this, then you should do nothing and the situation with the wildly proliferating medical marijuana industry may remain as it is: an unregulated, Wild West situation in which we are already seeing significant increases in major crime in Fort Collins and will inevitably see concomitant increases in marijuana usage among young people and adults for recreational purposes. If you can't say this to your children and grandchildren, I urge you to call or e-mail City Council members and attend the upcoming City Council meetings at 6 p.m. Tuesday and March 16 at which the City Council will consider enacting necessary limits and regulations on MMDs. In my view, the quality of life of Fort Collins desperately depends on it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D