Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jul 2010 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Pueblo Chieftain Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: Peter Roper GETTING LEGAL 17 Medical Pot Centers File Paperwork With County There's nothing like a deadline to get results. Hoping to get legal with both Pueblo County and state officials, the operators of 17 medical marijuana centers filed paperwork Thursday with the county planning department -- proving that medical pot already is a robust business in the county. Six of those applicants already have Colorado sales tax licenses, meaning they're in operation. County officials were aware of only four earlier this month. Another two applicants with existing state licenses are from Fort Collins and Colorado Springs, but they want to open centers here. Whether the commissioners will accept that expansion is unknown. Another nine applications came from county residents who are in the process of applying for a state sales tax license. "That's more (centers) than I realized were out there," said Gary Raso, the county's land-use attorney. Raso created this week's process of having any operating center file a simple "pre-application" document with county officials by 5 p.m. Thursday. The application had to spell out whether the business had or was applying for a state sales tax license. Under a new state law passed in May, medical marijuana centers that do not have some form of local government approval by July 1 cannot operate legally until they obtain a state marijuana license in July 2011. That deadline caused the crush of applications at the county planning department this week. Not that the centers are guaranteed of being legal once county officials adopt their own zoning and operating regulations later this year. "We were specific that nothing in this process can be used to claim prior county approval," Raso said. "We were simply trying to accommodate the marijuana centers that have been in operation with some means of staying in business -- as far as the state is concerned -- until our own regulations are complete," he said. While centers are coming out of the sagebrush in the county, Pueblo city officials sent a cease-and-desist notice Tuesday to the one marijuana center within the city that was operating despite a city moratorium. The owners of MediMar Ministries, 112 Colorado Ave., contend they can provide marijuana to their patients because they obtained a city sales license in 2009, before City Council imposed a moratorium on licensing any of those centers. Council is deciding whether to ask city voters on Nov. 2 whether to allow medical marijuana centers in the city. The county commissioners have taken a different approach, trying to accommodate the operating centers while the Legislature determined how to regulate the businesses. The commissioners said earlier this week they were not interested in a county ballot question on whether to allow the centers in the county. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D