Pubdate: Mon, 29 Mar 2010
Source: North County Times (Escondido, CA)
Copyright: 2010 North County Times
Contact: http://www.nctimes.com/app/forms/letters/index.php
Website: http://www.nctimes.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080
Author: Edward Sifuentes
Note: The document is available 
at  www.sdcounty.ca.gov/dplu/docs/POD_09-007_Medical_Marijuana.pdf

DRAFT POT DISPENSARY ORDINANCE TOO RESTRICTIVE, ADVOCATES SAY

Sheriff's Department Would Have Access to Patient Lists, Other Records

Proposed new rules would make it tough to open medical marijuana 
dispensaries anywhere in unincorporated San Diego County, advocates 
for cannabis-using patients said.

Under a proposed county ordinance released for public review earlier 
this month, medical marijuana dispensaries, or collectives, would be 
prohibited within 1,000 feet of residential parcels, schools, 
playgrounds, parks, churches, recreational centers and other 
marijuana dispensaries.

That rule would eliminate all but a few areas in the unincorporated 
areas of the county, according to county documents.

"It is, effectively, a ban," said Eugene Davidovich, a medical 
marijuana advocate and spokesman for San Diego Americans for Safe Access.

The proposed ordinance also includes other requirements that 
advocates say would violate patient privacy rules, such as giving law 
enforcement officers access to patient lists and security video tapes.

People have until Friday to comment on the draft ordinance. The 
county planning commission has scheduled a tentative hearing for May 14.

Among other things, the ordinance would require that:

. transactions be "fully visible from the public street";

. video cameras be installed;

. video recordings be accessible to law enforcement;

. transaction records and membership records be kept;

. transaction, membership and other records be made available for 
inspection by the Sheriff's Department.

Those regulations are aimed at making sure the collectives comply 
with state law, said Joe Farace, a county planning manager in charge 
of formulating the draft ordinance.

The ordinance was drafted within the planning department with 
recommendations from the Sheriff's Department and the county's 
attorney, Farace said.

The proposed ordinance would also ban advertising or signs in front 
of the establishments, require shatter-resistant glass, sprinkler 
systems and a uniformed security guard.

No one under age 18 would be allowed into the establishments without 
a parent, doctor or guardian, and business hours would be restricted 
to between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., according to the draft ordinance.

Last year, the county Board of Supervisors implemented a moratorium 
on medical marijuana collectives while administrators developed an 
ordinance to regulate pot providers.

For several years, the Board of Supervisors fought the state's 1996 
medical marijuana law.

The supervisors unsuccessfully challenged the law all the way to the 
U.S. Supreme Court, which declined to hear an appeal.

After hitting a legal dead end, the board agreed to start 
implementing the state's medical marijuana ID program and began 
writing the ordinance to regulate marijuana collectives.

Some medical marijuana advocates said they would prefer that the 
county put its health department - not the sheriff's department - in 
charge of overseeing the establishments.

"It's bad enough having an agency accessing information about 
patients, but to have that information accessible to law enforcement 
is extremely problematic," said Kris Hermes, a spokesman for 
Americans for Safe Access, a medical marijuana advocacy group in Oakland.

In recent years, authorities have shut down numerous dispensaries, 
including 14 in September.

Authorities said the dispensaries did not comply with state law and 
served as little more than fronts for illegal drug sales.

Local medical marijuana advocates said the raids show county 
authorities have little interest in regulating the establishments and 
are focused only on shutting them down.

However, one former dispensary owner called it a sign of progress 
that the county is drafting an ordinance.

Bob Riedel's Mother Earth Alternative Healing Cooperative Inc., a 
medical marijuana dispensary in Fallbrook, was shuttered Feb. 5 
because it didn't have a permit to operate in San Diego County.

"Overall, I think it's a step in the right direction," Riedel said.

To comment on the proposed ordinance, call 858-694-3690 or e-mail  ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake