Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jul 2010 Source: Record, The (Stockton, CA) Copyright: 2010 The Record Contact: http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=A_OPINION05 Website: http://www.recordnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428 Author: Daniel Thigpen, Record Staff Writer MARIJUANA TAX ON NOV. BALLOT IN STOCKTON STOCKTON - The City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to place a measure on the November ballot that would put a 2.5 percent tax on sales at medical marijuana dispensaries. The measure also would levy a 10 percent tax for all other marijuana businesses should California voters legalize pot for recreational use this fall. A separate measure also approved for the citywide ballot would eliminate a requirement that the city's fire chief be hired from within the ranks, change how firefighter labor disputes are resolved and target other Fire Department provisions in the city charter. That move sets up what will likely be another bitter fight between City Hall and its firefighters union, which are already engaged in a nasty labor dispute. By putting a proposed marijuana tax before voters, Stockton joins a growing list of cash-strapped cities - including Sacramento, San Jose and Long Beach - that are considering similar measures. Oakland already taxes pot dispensaries. If approved by Stockton voters, the 10 percent, non-medical marijuana tax would take effect only if voters statewide approve Proposition 19, which would legalize marijuana for recreational use. "It's important we're ready to tax those types of businesses," Mayor Ann Johnston said at Tuesday's meeting. The council has yet to adopt regulations for medical marijuana dispensaries in the city limits but expects to do so late next month. The Fire Department-related ballot measure would: Remove a city charter requirement that labor disputes with the fire union go to a third-party arbitrator, whose decisions are final and can be enforced in court. Eliminate a decades-old charter requirement that the fire chief be hired from within the department. The mayor and council members have said the proposal does not signal they are seeking a replacement for Fire Chief Ron Hittle. Repeal another charter section that allows firefighters to earn and use no less than 15 working days of vacation a year. Critics have said such a provision, typically found in labor contracts, should not be in the city's bylaws. City leaders say the department's charter mandates and union contracts have stifled the city's ability to control staffing and employee costs. The union, Stockton Professional Firefighters Local 456, opposes the proposed changes. The upcoming ballot fight parallels another conflict: The city is defending in court an attempt to close a truck company to shave more than $2 million from the department's share of a $23 million budget deficit. City leaders, at the same time, have been negotiating with the fire union to reach agreement on alternative cost-savings concessions. Hittle has called attempts to change the charter needless distractions. Also slated for the November ballot is a measure to allow Stockton to develop publicly assisted low-income housing. The city can go to voters every 10 years for the authority. Voters last approved such a measure in 2000. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake