Pubdate: Sat, 20 Mar 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 Jastrow Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries WALNUT CREEK MARIJUANA COLLECTIVE PREPARES FOR CLOSURE WALNUT CREEK - Outside a nondescript office building just off Interstate 680, several customers hoping to obtain medical marijuana from the 3C Medical Cannabis Collective were met at the front door and told the collective was closed for the day. The organization had locked its doors early because it had run out of marijuana, according to Brian Hyman, its executive director. Hyman said his depleted stock was in anticipation of the collective's last day of business Monday. The collective was found to be in violation of the city's zoning laws and ordered by a Superior Court judge last month to close by Tuesday or face contempt-of-court charges. Hyman said he plans to comply with the judge's ruling. "It's difficult to sit there and tell people there's nothing I can do," Hyman said. "It's a shame." The city of Walnut Creek has been trying to shut down the collective since it first opened in August. City leaders issued a $500 fine for every day the collective remained in business. The bill now stands at around $60,000, although Hyman plans to fight the penalties. But it was the judge's preliminary injunction last month that ultimately forced Hyman to begin shuttering the collective. Hyman said he has spent months trying to work out a compromise with the city, but to no avail. He suggested several ideas for potential ordinances last September that would allow the collective to stay in business. According to Hyman, the city simply ignored him. "They just keep punting it back. Nothing sticks," Hyman said. "They're really stringing patients along." He plans to continue the fight to one day reopen. Hyman recently joined forces with Americans for Safe Access, a national medical marijuana advocacy group, and formed a new Contra Costa County chapter. He also hopes to get a measure on this year's ballot. "A lot of people are outraged and we have a good rapport with patients," Hyman said. "We want to take this straight to the people." Those who were turned away Saturday expressed concern that they would no longer have the convenience of driving to Walnut Creek to pick up their medication. A woman from Pleasant Hill who requested anonymity said she was unsure what she would do once the collective closed. A degenerative disease in her back prevents her from driving much farther than Walnut Creek and she uses medical marijuana to deal with the pain. "I might have to go get it on the streets again," she said. Hyman said the vast legal bills he has compiled over the past few months - around $50,000 worth - have led him to the brink of bankruptcy. But the thought of shutting his doors and just walking away never occurred to him. "We're going to continue to fight," he said, "because we know people want us." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom