Pubdate: Sat, 27 Mar 2010 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Vincent Carroll MEDICAL MARIJUANA SLUGFEST Brian Vicente of Sensible Colorado - that would be the pro-cannabis lobby - isn't letting his pleasure with a House committee vote this week dull his sense of realism. Yes, the medical-marijuana industry is generally happy with regulations approved by the Judiciary Committee in a party-line vote, but Vicente knows the legislative terrain will only get steeper. "I feel like we're in a 12-round fight and the first round may turn out to be our best," he told me. For spectators to the slugfest over medical marijuana, it probably feels like the 10th or 11th round, given how long the conflict has raged. But those rounds were fought mostly in other arenas - before the Denver City Council, for example. This legislative dustup is the main event, and will determine whether dispensaries survive or are driven to extinction. If you're like me and hope dispensaries in some form survive in the interest of genuine patients who were poorly served by the previous caregiver model - and believe me, some were - the prospect of the industry taking a few lumps is not so terrible. Why? Because the amended bill overreaches, and because Colorado has a chance to get its regulatory model right. Among other things, the Judiciary Committee loosened rules on whether dispensary owners could have criminal drug records. But why? Is it really too much to expect that owners of businesses whose product on the black market props up a brutal network of thugs and assassins come to the table with clean hands? If they merely made a mistake earlier in their lives, fine. We all understand. But find another career. Sen. Chris Romer, a Denver Democrat and a sponsor of House Bill 1284, says a clean record is "non-negotiable" with him. He'll turn on the bill if it's not included. He's also determined to remove an amendment allowing the consumption of edible products on a dispensary's premises (its rationale being that residents of federally subsidized housing can't take medical marijuana to their homes). "We're all sympathetic to the folks in VA housing," Romer says, "but we're not doing Amsterdam hash bars. We're doing wellness clinics." Romer remains committed to regulatory standards that squeeze out what he calls "the knucklehead retail model" run by people with no expertise and not enough capital, and recounts a recent evening spent with Denver vice cops who responded to a crime at a low-rent dispensary. "Every employee was high," he told me, and "a 21-year-old guy was running the place." He foresees dispensaries as sophisticated "wellness" centers regulated as thoroughly as casinos, where "every transaction is videotaped." No riffraff owners or employees. The life cycle of every plant tracked and documented. And, for that matter, a local option: If cities and counties want to ban dispensaries altogether, so be it, Romer says. Those are fighting words, though, since the House committee removed that provision, too. Even Romer's Senate co-sponsor, Republican Nancy Spence of Centennial, isn't prepared to go so far. She's fine with granting wide latitude to communities in imposing zoning restrictions, but worries that Colorado could end up with just a few towns - Denver and Boulder in the metro area, for example - opening their doors to dispensaries. Where would that leave patients with serious ailments in remote locales who can't find a caregiver to supply medical marijuana? It's a good argument, but the opposing one is better: that the original medical-marijuana law approved by voters, Amendment 20, never contemplated a single retail dispensary. If the legislature is going to expand the scope of the law by allowing dispensaries, it should also give local voters the ability to opt out of such a dramatic departure - particularly given the passionate disputes over whether dispensaries promote crime and recreational drug use. Even with a local option, after all, many dispensaries will no doubt survive. If they're well run, meticulously regulated and prove over time that they're good neighbors that don't cater to potheads, as the current free-for-all system does, then other communities will gradually let them in, too. And if that's the case, the medical-marijuana industry will someday be able to declare uncontested victory, no matter how badly a few of the next rounds go. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake