Pubdate: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 Source: Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) Copyright: 2010 MaineToday Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.kjonline.com/readerservices/Send_a_Letter_to_the_Editor-KJ.html Website: http://www.kjonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1405 Author: Amy Calder WATERVILLE OKS POT DISPENSARY MORATORIUM Moratorium To Last At Least Six Months WATERVILLE -- There will be no medical marijuana dispensary in the city, at least not this year. City councilors on Tuesday voted unanimously to place a moratorium on considering applications for dispensaries and permits for at least six months. Councilors said they want to explore what areas of the city might be appropriate for dispensaries and related facilities such as storage or cultivation sites. They said they also want to ensure that the city has proper regulations in place. On July 20, councilors voted 7-0 to approve the moratorium; on Tuesday they took two final 7-0 votes. The issue arose recently when Northeast Patients Group cited a former KFC on Water Street as a possible location for a medical marijuana dispensary. Beverly Busque, who lives next door to the KFC, opposes the idea. She told councilors she and her husband Andrew do not want such a facility in the neighborhood. "So it needs to go somewhere else," she said. For three weeks, the Busques have been marching on the sidewalk daily to protest opening a dispensary at the KFC. She said she does not oppose medical marijuana; in fact, her father, whom she cared for in her home, died of cancer 2 1/2 years ago and if she could have obtained marijuana for him at the time, she would have done so. "However, I don't want it sold next to me, out of my backyard," she said. John Stewart of Washington, Maine, also spoke out against locating a dispensary on Water Street, although he said he was a patient himself and a caregiver for someone who uses medical marijuana. Stewart said the state took the citizens initiative regarding medical marijuana and "warped" it so it is unjust. He encouraged city officials to continue saying "no" to dispensaries. "You have the right to do this, so keep it up," he said. However, Councilor Rosemary Winslow, D-Ward 3, said there is another side to the medical marijuana issue. She said she has spoken to people who live both in and outside of Waterville in the last two weeks who are medically fragile and they and their physicians are seeking access to medical marijuana. "They are not individuals that are derelict," she said. "They are paying members of the communities and had feared and are thankful the Busques brought to the forefront the location at KFC." She said those people worry about the possibility of being identified if they have to go to such a location and what would happen to them if they leave the facility with marijuana. "There's certainly a lot more to look at -- to discuss down the road," Winslow said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D