Pubdate: Wed, 7 Jul 2010 Source: Battle Creek Enquirer (MI) Copyright: 2010 Battle Creek Enquirer Contact: http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1359 Author: Barrett Newkirk BATTLE CREEK APPROVES POT BUSINESS MORATORIUM Battle Creek's elected officials on Tuesday put a temporary stop to any new large medical marijuana operations opening in the city. The six-month moratorium is meant to give the city more time to decide how it wants to regulate businesses that legally dispense marijuana for medical use. Michigan voters approved the Medical Marijuana Act in November 2008, but the act offers little guidance for municipalities dealing with the new type of business. Other Michigan cities have enacted similar moratoriums while they work out their regulations. Commissioners voted to introduce the ordinance and then voted to pass it. Both votes were 7-1, with Commissioner Ryan Hersha casting the dissenting vote in each case. Commissioner Elizabeth Fulton was absent. An emergency provision in the city charter allows for the quick approval of ordinances in some situations. City Attorney Eileen Wicklund said the emergency provision could be applied in this case because it will help limit the number of businesses established before regulations such as zoning limitations are enacted. For "every kind of property use, whether it's marijuana or churches, we look at the zoning ordinance to see where that use is best situated in the city," Wicklund said. The moratorium ends in January or sooner if the city finalizes its rules. The moratorium does not affect existing businesses. It also does not apply to caregivers who are licensed by the state to provide marijuana for as many as five patients; it is meant to stop larger operations. Supporters of the state's medical marijuana law cautioned commissioners not to limit patients' access to treatment. Maggie Perrin, founding member of the Cereal City Compassion Club, said patients already have to wait four months to get prescription marijuana, and she worried the moratorium would lengthen that. Medical marijuana dispensaries "are a safe environment for patients to go and acquire medications, instead of going out on the street," Perrin said. In explaining his vote, Hersha said he didn't think putting a stop to a legal drug meant to help sick patients qualified as an emergency. Other commissioners said they questioned the quick approval of the moratorium, but were still going to support it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake