Pubdate: Wed, 30 Jun 2010 Source: Lewiston Sun Journal (ME) Copyright: 2010 Lewiston Sun Journal Contact: http://www.sunjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/743 Author: M. Dirk Langeveld PARIS PROCEEDING ON POT DISPENSARY MORATORIUM PARIS - The Board of Selectmen on Monday unanimously voted to adopt a moratorium to go to a special town meeting. The ordinance to establish a moratorium is based on one proposed to the town of Eliot and ultimately rejected there June 12. It states that the town does not have any ordinances to regulate dispensaries, and that the existing ordinances are inadequate to address the issue. It asks for six months to study the issue, and during that time the town may not take action on any applications for dispensaries or cultivating facilities or allow such facilities to operate in the town. Town Manager Phil Tarr said a hearing on the moratorium will take place at the next regular selectmen's meeting July 12. The special town meeting to address the moratorium and other issues will take place on July 26. The board first discussed the question at their meeting June 14 after a resident's request to establish locations in town to grow and sell medical marijuana. The applications to the Planning Board were removed pending town discussion on the issue, and no locations in Oxford County appear on a list of 29 preliminary applications submitted to the state before a June 25 deadline. Selectman Ted Kurtz said there can be different interpretations of the dispensary law. Under one interpretation, towns can limit the number of dispensaries to such an extent that none can be established. He said that the Department of Health and Human Services states that towns cannot ban the dispensaries. "I'm really confused about the law here, and for that reason I think we ought to go with the moratorium," he said. Selectman Lloyd "Skip" Herrick said he does not think towns can ban dispensaries due to state approval of the facilities last year, but agreed that more time was needed to discuss the issue. "I think there is enough unknown here to move forward here with the issue for the public in July, to seek out their feedback," he said. In November, Maine voters approved a question allowing the establishment of licensed dispensaries to distribute marijuana to people with a prescription for the drug. The decision came a decade after a vote in which state voters allowed the prescription and limited possession of marijuana for medical purposes. Pat Pelletier, a business teacher at Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School in Paris, submitted applications for two medical marijuana facilities to the Planning Board earlier this month. One proposed cultivating marijuana in the Perfect Stitch Embroidery building on James Road off Route 26, while the other sought to establish a dispensary in a now-vacant storefront in the Cornwall Shopping Plaza on Route 26. The state established June 25 as a deadline for applications for dispensaries, and will announce licenses on July 9. Currently, DHHS is only approving one dispensary for each of the state's eight public health districts in the first year. Oxford County's district includes Franklin and Androscoggin counties as well. Pelletier's application does not appear on the list of 29 applications submitted to the state, and her phone number was not in service on Tuesday. Six applications have been accepted for the district, with proposed locations in Auburn, Poland and Wilton. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake