Pubdate: Thu, 04 Nov 2010 Source: Acorn, The (Agoura Hills, CA) Copyright: 2010 J.Bee NP Publishing, Ltd. Contact: http://www.theacorn.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4227 Author: Stephanie Bertholdo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) A BUMMER TIME FOR POT SUPPORTERS While Prop. 19 Loses, Residents Protest Closure of Agoura Hills Marijuana Clinic Residents from the area filled the Agoura Hills City Council chambers last week to protest the closure of the Conejo Wellness Center, a medical marijuana dispensary that was shut down by law enforcement on Oct. 14. North Hollywood attorney Arthur Hodge, who is representing the Conejo Wellness Center in a lawsuit to keep the facility open, said the council ordinance that prohibits medical marijuana facilities in all business zones of the city was "illegal, unconstitutional and unenforceable." But city attorney Craig Steele said the ordinance had nothing to do with the legality of medical marijuana. (The statewide marijuana proposition failed in Tuesday's election.) The new city regulations specify that medical marijuana dispensaries that sell the drug for profit violate Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of 1996. Prop. 215 was passed to allow people to use cannabis for medical purposes. Hodge says the center is a nonprofit, that the city ordinance redefines nonprofit medical marijuana collectives as businesses, and that city codes cannot conflict with state law. Hodge claims the ordinance is illegal because state codes require a full hearing on certain business matters before the planning commission. He also charged the city with failing to study the issue in detail. The closure of the Conejo Wellness Center could have been based on the members' inability to obtain a proper business permit in 2009. The city denied the application, saying the request was too vague. Agoura Hills had outlawed the operation of medical marijuana dispensaries in all business zones in 2008. The dispensary first opened in 2006. The city added language to its municipal code to mesh with the Los Angeles County district attorney's stance that any over-thecounter sale of marijuana is illegal under state and federal law. People who use marijuana for medicinal purposes presented their case before the council. Kelly Ruotolo, a nurse who lives in Agoura Hills, asked if the council had conducted any studies to understand how medical marijuana helps people with a variety of illnesses. "It's important for a lot of people," she said. Thousand Oaks resident Lance Ott told the City Council that he was a cancer survivor and without the use of medical marijuana he wouldn't be here today. "We're not criminals," Ott said. "We just want safe access to our medicine." Bryan Smith of Camarillo said cannabis helps people take fewer prescription drugs that are potentially more dangerous. Longtime Agoura resident Paul Culberg, 68, has a degenerative spine disease. He read a letter to the council about how medical marijuana was more effective in managing his chronic pain than strong prescription drugs like Norco and Vicadin. Prescription drugs were "zombifying," he said. "I had accessed the cannabis I needed from the black market, which is both dangerous and filled me with anxiety," Culberg said. The Conejo Wellness Center was staffed by "experienced people" and not "punks," he said. Robin Hynek of Agoura Hills said that the dispensary provided a "much-needed service." She said the drug helps her with her medical problems without causing the drowsiness or nausea she experienced when using prescription drugs. Wendy Cohn spoke on behalf of her employer, Lynne Merrill, who runs Merrill Educational Center. Merrill's business is less than 1,000 feet from the Conejo Wellness Center and Cohn said that a drug dispensary so close to a school violates the law. Many of Merrill's clients are concerned with the dispensary's operation, Cohn said, adding that parents have witnessed drug deals taking place in a nearby parking lot. The wellness center's arrival in the building made staff members, parents and students "feel unsafe," Cohn said. City Councilmember Dan Kuperberg said the medicinal value of marijuana was not the issue, but said public safety was at stake. He said people leaving the dispensary could be robbed or hurt. Surrounding communities do not allow collectives, he said, adding that he doesn't want Agoura Hills to become known as the one city in the area where it is legal to obtain marijuana. "There needs to be a change in state law," Kuperberg said. Councilmember Harry Schwarz said, "It's painful to hear what people are going through, (but) we're not here to talk about (whether marijuana should be legal)." Even if Prop. 19 had passed in the Nov. 2 election and made marijuana available to all adults, not just the infirmed, the drug remains illegal under federal law. Prop. 19, similar to the previously approve Prop. 215, was fraught with procedural problems that made the public wary about its passage. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake