Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 Source: Daily Times-Call, The (Longmont, CO) Copyright: 2010, The Daily Times-Call Contact: http://www.timescall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1475 Author: Rachel Carter CITY COUNCIL CONSIDERING BAN ON POT DISPENSARIES LONGMONT -- City leaders appear to be leaning toward banning all medical marijuana dispensaries in Longmont. But they aren't yet sure whether that will include -- or how it will affect -- the several dispensaries already open in the city. The Longmont City Council voted 4-3 Tuesday night to have city staff draft an ordinance that would ban dispensaries in the city but, along with that draft law, also bring back more information to the council about how to deal with the eight dispensaries already operating in the city. Council members Brian Hansen, Sarah Levison and Sean McCoy voted against the motion, saying they would prefer to maintain some control by tailoring local regulations for dispensaries. House Bill 1284, which went into effect July 1, creates a state licensing authority that will regulate dispensaries. But that law also gives local governments the right to create their own regulations, ban dispensaries outright or refer the issue to voters. Councilman Gabe Santos questioned what would happen to existing dispensaries if the council approved a ban. City attorney Eugene Mei said it's an untested legal area that could spark lawsuits. Santos then proposed drafting a ban but also asked for more information about existing operations -- because it was his understanding that dispensary owners who already were open would still be able to do business. Marijuana is still illegal under federal law, and when voters approved making medicinal use legal in Colorado, it "put cities in a very precarious situation," Santos said. He would prefer that Congress deal with the issue on a federal level and eventually get the drug regulated and on shelves in pharmacies. But that hasn't happened. "Does marijuana have some benefits? It's been proven," he said. "But until that (federal) law has been changed, my hands are tied." As a teacher, McCoy said, he's not a fan of marijuana because he has seen how abusing it is dangerous for kids. But he didn't support an outright ban by the council or putting it to voters because he would prefer to create local regulations. Hansen worried that putting the question to voters, depending on the ballot language, could keep the council from being able to make changes to local regulations in the future. He also pointed to the city's annual community survey; this year's survey showed 57 percent of residents opposed an outright ban. "The people who took the survey, they weren't interested in an all-out ban, but they were interested in having it highly restricted," Hansen said. Councilwoman Katie Witt, however, said there were only two groups of people she cared about in the discussion: children and patients. She is confident patients can get their medication, even if dispensaries are banned, but she wants to maintain Longmont's image of being a family-friendly, hometown city. "I feel very strongly that it is more important to maintain the child-friendly atmosphere in Longmont," Witt said. "I honestly believe our patients will find a way to get their medicine." Levison said medicine cabinets today -- with bottles of OxyContin and Vicodin -- present as much, if not more, of a problem for families and children. "To understand that there are true medicinal benefits of marijuana and allowing people access to that since that has been passed by state law, I still believe we should have that option available to people," Levison said. But Mayor Bryan Baum said patients still will have access. He sympathizes with those who use medicinal cannabis for a variety of ailments and said he would if he needed to. Keeping patients from legally getting their medication is wrong, but this motion wouldn't do that, Baum said. Amendment 20, which voters passed in 2000 to legalize medicinal marijuana in Colorado, never mentioned dispensaries. "The law that's on the books really doesn't say anything about dispensaries," Baum said. City staff will bring back a draft ordinance to the council at a future meeting, along with information about how to handle existing dispensaries. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D