Pubdate: Wed, 06 Oct 2010 Source: Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Copyright: 2010 Arizona Daily Star Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 Author: Stephanie Innes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?273 (Proposition 203) COUNTY TO RESTRICT MEDICAL POT SITES If medical marijuana dispensaries open in Pima County, they won't be allowed to locate in neighborhoods. In anticipation state voters will decriminalize marijuana for medical use Nov. 2, the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved code changes about how medical marijuana will be grown and sold. The local regulations go above and beyond language in the statewide ballot measure. While Proposition 203 - the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act - regulates who would be able to use marijuana, it does not restrict the location of marijuana dispensaries, aside from being at least 500 feet from schools. The board voted marijuana sales should be restricted to CB2 zoning, which is for larger commercial operations and bars. Supervisors also required dispensaries have someone on staff licensed to dispense drugs, which is not required by the initiative. And the board ruled sales must be from a fixed location, shutting down a point raised in the debate over the initiative, that "canibus caravans" would be cruising neighborhoods. "One of the most important parts of this is to make sure we don't have 'grow houses' in residential neighborhoods; that would be very problematic," chief deputy Pima County Attorney Amelia Craig Cramer said. "The board acted in a proactive manner. They are providing very significant protection of children." In addition to restricting medical marijuana dispensaries to areas designated commercial, the county on Tuesday decided dispensaries must be at least 1,000 feet away from schools, drug treatment faculties, libraries and churches. The supervisors also rewrote the county health code to specify that the marijuana dispensaries must hire someone who is licensed to dispense drugs under the Arizona Controlled Substances Act. "That makes sense. We are pushing for a clinical environment and having someone licensed on staff will reinforce that this is about medicine," said Andrew Myers of the Arizona Medical Marijuana Policy Project, which led the citizen initiative. "We allowed for flexibility for municipalities." Dispensaries may have an off-site location for cultivation of the marijuana, but in Pima County that would need to be in a commercial area, too. The board decided not to allow off-site cultivation in industrial areas. Craig Cramer said other cities have had problems with such sites in industrial areas being used as fronts for illegal drug operations. Myers disagrees, however - he says industrial areas are more easy to secure. The supervisors decided to revisit the code changes six months after Prop. 203 takes effect, to determine whether there are unintended consequences. While county officials said it's important to be ready for 203's passage, Myers said the board's actions Tuesday were unnecessarily fast and precluded discussion on issues such as cultivation in industrial areas. "I wish they would wait until after the election and have an informed discussion," he said. "Right now I see this being used as a political opportunity. We have plenty of time." To obtain medical marijuana, people over the age of 18 with one of the qualifying conditions would need a written "certification" - instead of a prescription - from a doctor, naturopath or homeopath. The certification would qualify them for a card from the Arizona Department of Health Services, allowing them to legally buy 2.5 ounces of marijuana every 14 days. State health officials would regulate the marijuana and expect to begin issuing cards in March or April. About 120 nonprofit dispensaries would be allowed in Arizona if 203 passes. The measure lists specific medical conditions including cancer, Crohn's disease and chronic pain that would allow a patient to qualify. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake