Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jul 2010 Source: Aurora Sentinel (CO) Copyright: 2010 Aurora Sentinel Contact: http://www.aurorasentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1672 COUNCIL NOT LOOKING PAST SMOKE AND MIRRORS ON POT ISSUE That funny smell coming from city hall is the odor of lawmakers passing around the hypocrisy pipe about the fate of medical marijuana dispensaries in Aurora. City lawmakers voted overwhelmingly July 12 to ask voters to decide the issue, creating a referendum that will query voters whether to ban the dispensaries in the city. The vote came after state law changed earlier this month, giving Colorado city's and towns the power to allow and regulate such dispensaries, or for local lawmakers to ban them, or to refer a question about bans to voters. Aurora City Council members agreed that the issue is an important one, and that voters should have a say. Given that logic, Aurora voters had better get ready for marathon ballots in the future since city lawmakers regularly decide a bevy of critical issues each week. The move by city council is pretty much a cop out. Granted, there's no doubt this is a controversial issue. While it's clear that Colorado and Aurora voters in 2000 agreed that marijuana has medicinal value for clearly ill individuals, it's unclear if the voters envisioned a booming industry with a plethora of dispensaries and tens of thousands of "patients" flooding state rolls with inexplicable, sudden back pain. Abruptly, the practicality of getting what we wished for is much more complex than just about everyone envisioned. But for now, the state has sanctioned the notion of marijuana dispensaries. The question now is, should Aurora join in, and how? The problem with city council's response is that the question raises many more questions. Where should dispensaries operate? Should the city regulate them? Who should he permitted to go inside? How many should there be? The answer to many of those questions will have a direct bearing on whether voters might or might not want them cropping up in the city. If the city says they can't be within a mile of each other, that means there could be no more than about 142 dispensaries. Instead, voters are expected to buy or deny this political pig in a poke in November, and they find out what they got or gave away after that. With something so important that it has to be referred to voters, no one should have to be surprised by what they agreed to after the election. City lawmakers should have sorted through the issue themselves, proposing a set of rules and regulations that these pot shops would have to live under, and then determining whether the public would or wouldn't support such a program. At the very least, city lawmakers need to give some sense of their inclinations on the matter. Aurora is likely in the cross hairs of organizations looking to challenge the constitutionality of a ban in court, considering Colorado's third-largest city could be the biggest platform to test those laws. But the need to be cautious can't overshadow the need of voters for the details they need to make an informed decision. In retrospect, the state did little to help itself this year in clearing up proper dosing methods, prescription methods and possession limits so patients don't become suppliers themselves. That was the work that state lawmakers were tasked to do, and instead of holding them up to that idea, we're left with a ticking bomb waiting to explode in the courts. City lawmakers need to rise above their political and legal instincts and press for exploring all city options and a likely direction before voters decide the issue this fall. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D