Pubdate: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 Source: Arizona Daily Sun (AZ) Copyright: 2011 Arizona Daily Sun Contact: http://news.azdailysun.com/opinion/letter_submit.cfm Website: http://www.azdailysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1906 Authors: Joe Ferguson and Cyndy Cole EXPANDED MEDICAL POT ZONES PROPOSED To illustrate the number of dispensaries distributed throughout the state, city of Flagstaff staff have drawn an odd parallel: The number of Burger King franchises in Arizona. There are 135 homes of the Whopper scattered throughout the state while there will be up 125 dispensaries set to open later this year. Arizona voters last November authorized marijuana for medical uses. Two meetings tonight in Flagstaff will set at least temporary local zoning laws determining where growing and selling facilities can be located in the city and in unincorporated Coconino County. Elected officials in each agency have recently asked staff to come up with requirements that don't make it too cumbersome to open or utilize a marijuana dispensary. 3 DISPENSARIES LOCALLY David Grandon keeps notes and reports in a neatly organized thick black binder to help him keep track of the latest in Prop. 203 news. The former local art gallery owner will be watching tonight as the Flagstaff City Council and the Coconino County Board of Supervisors each consider zoning rules for medical marijuana dispensaries. It's estimated that three dispensaries will open in the greater Flagstaff area, two inside the city limits and another just outside Flagstaff. The recommended underlying zoning for the dispensaries inside the city limits would allow their operation in largely the same places as the fast food giant might be found: strip malls and other commercially zoned areas as well as industrial areas in town. Coconino County is expected to have five (including Flagstaff), in a state system that has divided the dispensaries geographically. Areas like Bellemont and Doney Park could become county sites, for example. GROWN WHERE IT'S SOLD? Grandon, who is part of a group of local professionals that wants to open a dispensary, will be keeping a close eye on the rules related to the physical size of a retail location. Flagstaff and county officials are recommending a cap of 2,500 square feet for dispensaries, something Grandon is concerned about. "My vision of a dispensary is not simply a place to vend and a retail format for medical marijuana," Grandon said. He wants to establish a larger location that has room for a chiropractor, a massage therapist and other therapeutic services co-located on the same site. Both the city and county are recommending large, off-site cultivation locations, despite a recommendation from the Flagstaff Police Department for the collocation of the two types of operations. It is something Grandon favors as well, at least in the beginning. "I like to have everything under one roof," Grandon said. He said a natural progression eventually would allow dispensaries to establish secondary, off-site locations once the business can no longer produce enough on-site to keep up with customer demand. MARIJUANA IN FOOD? Both agencies allow on-site cultivation at the dispensaries, but the 2,500-square-foot limits the size the growing operation. Coconino County is looking at how this will work for food. The law allows adding marijuana to food for patients, and the county would allow dispensaries to send the marijuana out for baking or other cooking, then require that the food be returned to the dispensaries for sale. If you go: The City of Flagstaff and Coconino County Board of Supervisors each plan to set zoning policies for marijuana dispensaries and cultivation facilities. - - The Coconino County Board of Supervisors meets at 6 p.m. at 219 E. Cherry Avenue. - - The City of Flagstaff meets at 5:30 p.m. at 211 W. Aspen Avenue. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt