Pubdate: Tue, 10 Aug 2010 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2010 Bay Area News Group Contact: http://www.contracostatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/96 Author: Lisa P. White MEDICAL MARIJUANA ORDINANCE FINISHED, BUT COUNCIL VOTE STILL A WAYS OFF MARTINEZ -- After months of painstaking, line by line review, the draft medical marijuana ordinance has been completed. However, it will probably be several months until the City Council votes on the proposal. The major change in the ordinance replaces the conditional use permit with a nontransferable license, which would be valid for one year and eligible for annual renewal. The ordinance goes next to the Planning Commission. But the November election could play a role in whether the new rules become law because a statewide measure to legalize marijuana is on the ballot and three council members are up for re-election, including Lara DeLaney and Mike Menesini, who have been working on the ordinance for a year. On Monday, the Public Safety Committee reviewed the process the city manager and police chief will use to evaluate applicants. Applicants must meet a long list of criteria such as having a clean criminal record, a suitable location and adequate security measures. DeLaney and Menesini also agreed to include a scoring matrix. "We want this to be completely equal, but there's going to be some subjectivity involved," Menesini said. Later he added, "scoring gives structure to how the applications are vetted." Applicants who are denied a license may appeal to the City Council. DeLaney and Menesini added a provision giving residents the right to appeal, as well. The city manager can revoke or suspend a dispensary's license with five days' notice. If the police chief believes the dispensary poses an imminent threat to public safety, the city manager may close it immediately. The city will set up citizen oversight committees, akin to neighborhood watch groups, to review issues such as traffic and public safety. And DeLaney reiterated her desire to see sales tax revenue from the dispensaries dedicated to the police department. Martinez has had an ordinance allowing medical marijuana dispensaries since 2000, but has never approved one. In response to Police Chief Tom Simonetti's call for a ban last year, the Public Safety Subcommittee has been crafting a less restrictive ordinance, with significant input from medical marijuana advocates and little involvement from residents. The proposed ordinance requires that dispensary operators keep detailed records of all transactions, including the amount of medical marijuana dispensed, patients' names, source of the marijuana and physicians' contact information. The subcommittee dropped restrictions on how much marijuana a dispensary can keep on site. Instead, a dispensary may keep a "rational amount" for its patients. Patients may purchase two ounces of dried marijuana, or baked goods containing the equivalent of two ounces, per visit to the dispensary. Other key provisions include criminal background checks for licensees, requirement for on-site security personnel and cameras and set hours of operation. The ordinance also bans on-site consumption; and prohibits dispensaries from opening within 1,000 feet of schools, churches with schools or day care centers, facilities serving young people or another dispensary. Dispensaries would have to be located in commercial or light industrial zoning districts no closer than 300 feet to residential parcels. If the council adopts the ordinance, one dispensary could operate for a six-month trial period, with a maximum of three allowed in the city. After advocates objected, the subcommittee agreed to drop provisions restricting each dispensary to serving a maximum of 500 patients per month, capping monthly visits at 1,000 and limiting dispensaries to a total floor area of 1,000 square feet. If the City Council approves the ordinance, Martinez would be the first Central County city to welcome medical marijuana dispensaries. Last month, Richmond capped the number of dispensaries at three, restricted the areas where they can operate and placed a measure on the November ballot calling for a 5 percent tax on gross sales of marijuana, whether purchased for medical or recreational use. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D