Pubdate: Sat, 17 Apr 2010 Source: Weekly Calistogan (CA) Copyright: 2010 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://www.weeklycalistogan.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5048 Author: Kevin Courtney PLANNERS SAY 'OK' TO MEDICAL POT Commission Voted 3-2 Thursday to Support Allowing Pot Clinics in Office Zones Napa's plan to authorize only one medical marijuana dispensary struck three planning commissioners as perhaps not enough. For two commissioners, even one would be too many. The Planning Commission voted 3-2 Thursday night to support a zoning change that would allow pot clinics in office zones. The City Council will be the final word on this. A majority of commissioners supported the council's decision to allow medical marijuana dispensaries under highly regulated conditions. "The words 'Napa' and 'progressive' usually don't go together," said Commissioner Gordon Huether, who approved of the city's new direction. Commissioner Michelle Benvenuto disagreed. "I don't think Napa actually needs to be this progressive," she said. Benvenuto said marijuana had a proven medical benefit, but she preferred that patients grow their own or go out of town to buy their medicine. "I don't think it's an appropriate land use for Napa," she said. Commissioner Jay Golik voted with Huether and Chairman Arthur Roosa in recommending that the council create zoning for marijuana clinics, but said the city was being too conservative in wanting to allow only one clinic in the first year. "My feeling is we're not looking at this big enough," Golik said. He agreed with potential applicants who said the demand might swamp a single clinic and lead to higher prices. The city's proposed ordinance would allow the first clinic to serve about 7,700 patients - 10 percent of the city's population - yet the demand could be greater than that, potential applicants said. Stephanie Tucker, a San Francisco attorney who advises marijuana clinics, said the 10 percent cap was unrealistic. "The more people learn about it, the more the demand grows," she said. Tucker estimated that 30 percent of the population could potentially benefit medically from marijuana, which struck Roosa as an amazingly high number. "It could be I'm out of touch," he said. Roosa said capping clinic membership at 10 percent of the city's population could result in the operation not being economically viable. Many members might become inactive after a while, he said. In voting against zoning that would determine where the first clinic could be located, Commissioner Tom Trzesniewski said he couldn't make the finding that the "public health, safety and general welfare" would be served. "I don't really understand the scope of what we're doing here is and where it's going," Trzesniewski said. If clinics are approved, the city might need two or three to meet demand, he said. Representatives of potential applicants want the city to allow more than one clinic during the first year and allow buildings zoned for light industrial to be eligible. David Aten, representing Safe Medical Access, said his group was having trouble finding a medical office location with enough parking and a willing landlord. Industrial sites might work better, he said. Several commissioners supported industrial sites, saying applicants should be able to make the case that they work better than office zones. Roosa asked about a statewide proposition planned for the November ballot that would legalize marijuana for recreational use. How would this affect Napa's medical marijuana ordinance? he said. Legally, the proposition might not have any consequence, but it could reduce the economic viability of a pot clinic, Deputy City Attorney Peter Spoerl said. The commission's zoning recommendation and comments on medical marijuana will go to the City Council, which will hold a hearing on June 1. Once regulations are in place, the city will invite applications for the first license. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake