Pubdate: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 Source: Orland Press-Register (Willows, CA) Copyright: 2010 Freedom Communications Contact: http://www.orland-press-register.com/sections/letters/ Website: http://www.orland-press-register.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4872 Author: Rick Longley Note: The Orange County Register contributed to this report. LEAVES CITIES, COUNTIES UNCERTAIN A long-awaited state appellate decision regarding medical marijuana dispensaries has both sides waiting for more. Some hoped the decision out of a Anaheim lawsuit would loosen up prohibitions against establishing the collectives, while some hoped it would give local governments the final authority to decide where to put them or whether to allow them at all. But exactly what California's 4th District Court of Appeal ruling will mean for the counties and cities - many of which passed interim bans on medical marijuana dispensaries until the decision on the Anaheim case - is up in the air. One news account referred to it as a "cliffhanger." Anaheim was sued by the Qualified Patients Association. The case ended up in the appellate Court of Appeal, which released a mixed ruling Thursday. The three-judge panel agreed with medical-marijuana patients that a lower court erred in declaring that federal law, which prohibits any use of marijuana, pre-empted state law that allows for specific medical-marijuana activities. But the appellate panel also determined that the lower court "correctly concluded that plaintiffs failed to state a cause of action" related to the Unruh Act, which the court said pertains to business establishments, not legislative acts. In short, many feel the ruling failed to provide the clear precedent that both sides were anticipating on whether California cities have the right to ban dispensaries. However, the attorney for medical marijuana patients called it a "significant victory" that prohibits cities from standing solely on federal law to prohibit medical marijuana dispensaries. The city of Orland and Glenn County also have temporary marijuana dispensary bans in place, but have yet to have challenges to them. The city of Willows does not have a marijuana dispensary ban. Orland's ban runs to Dec. 6, and the county's ban remains in effect until next March in the unincorporated areas. Both governments issued the bans in order to study how to regulate and where to place such facilities in their jurisdictions, officials said. Orland City Manager Paul Poczobut Jr. and City Planner Nancy Sailsbery said they had not read the court's rulling as of Tuesday and referred questions to the city attorney Tom Andrews who drafted Orland's ordinance. Andrews said he is still looking at the court ruling to see how it fits with the present dispensary moratorium. However, he does not think the city will take any action until after the November election where state voters will decide on legalizing recreational marijuana use. He said the recent court ruling still does not reject the idea of local control of such facilities, so the city could use a police presence and local zones to monitor these establishments in the future. Willows City Manager Steve Holsinger said he is not familiar with the recent court ruling, but he is surprised at the premise federal law does not apply to marijuana dispensaries. He said the city does not issue permits for any business that operates against federal or state laws. "I am dumbfounded sometimes by court rulings that create a dichotomy for local governments," Holsinger said. He added marijuana use is clearly against federal law, but it amazes him there is a possiblility Willows cannot use that to regulate marijuana dispensaries and cooperatives. Yet at the same time, the city must protect nuisance birds like egrets under federal regulations. As a result, the city must decide which law to enforce based on the ruling of the week, he said. And while Holsinger said he believes there are likely medical benefits to marijuana, he thinks dispensaries are not the answer for distributing it. He also feels there probably are as many problems associated with dispensaries as there are patients that benefit from them - based on reading blog's such as one by Chico's police chief, Holsinger said. Glenn County Counsel Huston Carlyle was out of the office Tuesday and unavailable for comment. The Orange County Register contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D