Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 2010 Source: Malibu Times, The (CA) Copyright: 2010 The Malibu Times Contact: http://www.malibutimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1363 Author: Jonathan Friedman CITY TO POT SHOP: MOVE Neighboring Businesses Breath Sigh Of Relief. If the Green Angel Collective medical marijuana dispensary wants to reopen for business, it needs to find a new location. The City Council on Monday refused to adjust the medical marijuana law to allow it do business at the current location on Pacific Coast Highway near Rambla Pacifico. The current city law states that no marijuana dispensary can be located within a 1,000-foot radius of sensitive areas such as parks, schools and religious centers. The Green Angel location does not comply because it is too close too Las Flores Canyon Park. The facility closed last month after a tentative arrangement it had with the city expired. Green Angel management asked for the distance restriction to be decreased to 500 feet. There was no support from any council member for this. "I'm very reluctant to do a zone text amendment to specifically benefit one business," Mayor Pro Tem John Sibert said. "That bothers me. I don't think that's good precedent for the City Council." Jeffrey Valle, attorney for Green Angel, said the law should be changed because, among other reasons, if Green Angel could not reopen, it would give a Malibu monopoly on medical marijuana to PCH Collective. He also said that his client was the better and cheaper of the two facilities in this city. "Green Angel is the collective that serves cancer patients and the seriously ill," he said. "Does that mean that no younger people go there? Of course not. These are medical marijuana collectives. And there are plenty of issues with that general proposition. But that's not what is before the council." Several public speakers told the council that Green Angel is less than innocent. Among the speakers was the owner of neighboring Terra Restaurant. He and others spoke of marijuana being smoked at the facility, which is not allowed by state law. Also, they said many young people, who do not appear to be sick, get marijuana there. Councilmember Laura Rosenthal said it was not her reason for voting against amending the law, but she did not believe Green Angel was in good standing. "It sounds as if Green Angel has not been a good neighbor, good neighbor to the restaurant next to it, good neighbor to the residents who are actually very close to it and a good neighbor to Malibu," Rosenthal said. City Hall contract approved Also at the meeting, the council approved a nearly $4 million contract with SMC Construction Co. for the improvements to the new City Hall. This was the final vote on the project, and Councilmember Pamela Conley Ulich took her final shot at it because it involves reducing the number of seats in the current performance center by more than 200. She said that Malibu not keeping all of the approximately 500 seats would go down as one of her biggest regrets from her time on the council. "I find it ironic that here we are spending time at the council table debating how the Malibu song should be selected, yet we're destroying, on the other hand, the place where we could hear that song," Conley Ulich said. "And maybe it's [the performance center] not good for the spoken word, but it's great for the sung word." The other council members disagreed with Conley Ulich's assessment. They said the new facility will be a good place to hold government meetings and performances. "I look it at as an improved space for the community to perform in," Councilmember Lou La Monte said. "The way it is now, it really isn't wonderful for theater ... I've been involved in theater most of my life, and that's not a great theater ... The improvements that they are making is just that, improvements." Sibert said of the theater, "It was never going to be a cash cow for the city. The place went bankrupt. That's why we got it for so cheap." Also at the meeting, the council approved a permit and technical zoning adjustments to allow for the remodeling of the 76 gas station center at Corral Canyon Road and Pacific Coast Highway. The project includes the expansion of the convenience store. But management will only be able to sell an amount of alcohol that would be allowed at its current size. Also, alcohol cannot be sold after 12 a.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D