Pubdate: Tue, 22 Feb 2011 Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2011 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.dailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Heath Urie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?277 (Cannabis - Medicinal - Colorado) BOULDER ISSUES FIRST MEDICAL MARIJUANA BUSINESS LICENSE TO GOOD HUMOR MEDS More Than 100 Applications Still Pending Before City Officials Boulder's first medical marijuana business license has been issued to a downtown dispensary, marking a milestone in the industry's ongoing quest for acceptance and legitimacy. Good Humor Meds, located at 720 Pearl St., received its operating license from the city's deputy clerk at about 4 p.m. Friday. The business is the first of 117 pending applications to operate a medical marijuana dispensary in Boulder to gain formal approval. "It's been a long, hard road," said Ray Mayer, who runs the Boulder-based Cannabis Consulting Group. "Just to try and go through the compliance issues is unimaginable." Mayer worked with businessman Mark Natichioni -- a former construction worker from Placerville, a small town located about 300 miles southwest of Boulder -- to develop a business plan for Good Humor Meds. Natichioni, 58, registered the company in October 2009. He moved the operation from its former home at Broadway and Spruce Street, but the Pearl Street location didn't open in time to operate legally while waiting for the city to approve a business license. So, for more than a year, Natichioni has been paying rent on a vacant building. He now plans to hold a grand-opening celebration in about two weeks. "It's been a heck of a ride," Natichioni said. "Hopefully it's going to keep me out of bankruptcy." Natichioni said the ailing construction industry led him to Boulder for a career change. Marijuana, it seemed, was a natural fit for him. "When I went to college, I smoked marijuana," he said. "I didn't know it was medical, but I knew there was something good about it." Natichioni said he now uses the drug to fight pain from a previous back injury, and he wants to help others by selling the plant. "The treatment does work for me," he said. "I started thinking, 'Maybe this is something I can get into.'" Natichioni said the name of the shop is a nod to Good Humor ice cream products -- a childhood favorite. "At one point, we were going to deliver in a Good Humor ice-cream truck," he said. A spokesperson for London-based Unilever, the parent company of the Good Humor brand, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In addition to selling medical marijuana, Natichioni said the shop also will offer massages, an oxygen bar, homeopathic medicine and acupuncture services. "We're not just having a pot shop," he said. To get an operating license in Boulder, Natichioni was required to pay an application fee of $3,000 and a license fee of $2,000. He also was required to complete a 22-page application process that probes the details of each pot proprietor's personal, financial and business affairs. The City Council last May approved a sweeping set of operating rules for medical marijuana businesses, including an application process that requires background checks, security plans and "good neighbor" plans. But getting businesses to properly fill out the paperwork has proved to be a stumbling block. In September, Boulder officials said the first 42 applications for medical marijuana business licenses were filled out so poorly that they might have to reject them all. The city subsequently extended the deadline and held a series of meetings to help dispensary owners navigate the complicated forms. By the final Nov. 1 deadline, the city had received 117 applications for a medical marijuana business license. That's about half of the 200 active marijuana businesses that were remitting sales tax, leading city officials to try and sniff out dispensaries that didn't apply for a license on time and now are suspected of operating illegally. Eric Moutz, a Boulder attorney who specializes in medical marijuana issues, said that despite the initial confusion over the applications, the city has put forth a good effort to work with dispensaries. "Boulder is happy to have these businesses operating, as long as you play by the rules," he said. "Boulder's regulations are actually fairly reasonable in the grand scheme of things." He said most of his clients are far more concerned about complying with state laws for medical marijuana, which continue to be in a state of flux. Diane Czarkowski, owner of Boulder Kind Care, located at 2031 16th St., said she recently completed her "personal interview" with an investigator -- part of the process to apply for a state license to operate a medical marijuana business. She said she'd be relieved when she has both the state and local licenses in hand. "We want to get it done and focus more on improving the business," she said. Going through such rigorous paperwork could eventually pay off, Czarkowski said, by discouraging unscrupulous pot shops and adding legitimacy to the industry. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom