Pubdate: Tue, 06 Apr 2010
Source: Daily Times-Call, The (Longmont, CO)
Copyright: 2010, The Daily Times-Call
Contact:  http://www.timescall.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1475
Author: Rachel Carter
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries

COUNCIL TO TALK MARIJUANA SHOPS TONIGHT

LONGMONT -- Most people think the city should regulate  medical 
marijuana dispensaries, according a city  survey.

And Longmont City Council members will discuss how to  do so during 
their meeting at 7 tonight.

Some ways city planners say the council could regulate  pot shops are 
through zoning, licensing requirements  and possibly keeping 
dispensaries from opening near  schools, parks and homes.

City leaders also will discuss whether to allow  marijuana growing 
facilities and how to regulate them.

More than 600 of the 700 people who took the online  survey -- about 
86 percent -- said the city should  regulate dispensaries, with 80 
percent saying pot shops  should be limited to certain zoning districts.

Most of those people, 65 percent, said the shops should  only be 
allowed in commercial districts, while 46  percent said they should 
be allowed in industrial  zones.

A majority of people who completed the survey also  supported 
requiring minimum distances between  dispensaries and schools, 
child-care facilities, parks  and residential areas.

They also said the city should have special licensing  requirements 
that include background checks.

Longmont has nine dispensaries that opened before the  City Council 
adopted a moratorium in October.

In December, the council voted to extend the moratorium  through the 
end of June to give city planners time to  research possible 
regulations and wait for state  legislators to propose or pass any 
new laws about  dispensaries.

Though the moratorium does not affect dispensaries  already doing 
business in the city, it does prohibit  new ones from opening.

If the City Council decides tonight to move forward on  drafting 
regulations, the next step would be to take  the proposed codes to 
the Planning and Zoning  Commission in May.

After the commission makes a recommendation, city staff  will bring 
back the code changes to the City Council in  June.

Because those ordinances take time to go into effect,  city planners 
say it will probably be necessary to  extend the moratorium on 
dispensaries until any new  regulations take effect.

The city began collecting sales tax from medical  marijuana 
dispensaries in September. The city collected  about $18,000 in 2009, 
and another $12,000 this year  through February.

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If you go

What: Longmont City Council

When: 7 tonight

Where: Longmont Civic Center, 350 Kimbark St.

Information: Call 303-651-8649
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom