Pubdate: Wed, 28 Apr 2010 Source: Reporter, The (Vacaville, CA) Copyright: 2010 The Reporter Contact: http://www.thereporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/472 Author: Kimberly K. Fu MEDICAL POT DISPENSARIES WON'T COME TO VACAVILLE IN '10 Anyone concerned about medical marijuana dispensaries cropping up in Vacaville can relax -- at least until next year. That's when the emergency final extension of an ordinance regarding a moratorium on such establishments, which the City Council unanimously approved Tuesday night, expires. The council also unanimously approved a staff report related to the matter. Talks regarding the dispensaries began last year. That May, the council adopted a similar ordinance. One month later, the ordinance was approved for an additional 10 months and 15 days. The looming expiration date -- May 25 -- and the pending outcome of medical marijuana legislation now moving through the courts pushed officials to seek yet another extension. That case, Assistant City Attorney Melinda Stewart explained, is being heard in the Fourth District Court of Appeal in Anaheim and regards whether local dispensaries can be banned from operating in municipalities. "We're awaiting a decision to give the city direction," Stewart said. Vacaville resident Katherine Caldwell urged the council to allow dispensaries the right to operate within city limits. Proposition 215, aka the compassionate Use Act of 1996, and Senate Bill 420, aka the Medical Program Act of 2003 that clarifies the scope and application of Proposition 215, were both voted in by the people, she pointed out. "I just assumed it was a done deal," she said, admitting surprise that governments would later "block the will of the people." An 18-year resident of Vacaville, Caldwell said a back injury sidelined her seven years ago, resulting in chronic hip and back pain. In the last year, her doctor suggested alternative treatments, including medical marijuana. Pot worked, she said. The treatments, she added, aren't about getting high but about quality of life. "When you're dealing with excruciating pain, you are not getting high," she advised. "You are getting (to) normal. I felt like I got my life back." Residents needing medical marijuana must now travel to other cities for treatment, Caldwell said, when the money would be better spent in Vacaville. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake