Pubdate: Sun, 27 Mar 2011 Source: Kitsap Sun (WA) Copyright: 2011 Kitsap Sun Contact: http://web.kitsapsun.com/scripts/letters.html Website: http://www.kitsapsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4404 Bookmark: http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-wa (Washington) STATE NEEDS TO CLARIFY MEDICAL MARIJUANA Despite encouragement to open up the city to medical marijuana businesses, the Port Orchard City Council decided last week to keep the door closed -- for a while, anyway. Last month, the council voted to impose a six-month moratorium on referral or dispensary medical marijuana businesses. At a public hearing last Tuesday, council members took no action on the ordinance, tacitly allowing the moratorium to remain in effect until it expires in late August. An attorney representing Tacoma Greenthumb and Greenthumb Medical, a medical marijuana dispensary and referral center, respectively, said those firms want to open a joint operation on Bay Street in downtown Port Orchard. Barring that, he said the business owner wants to open the referral center downtown, and the actual dispensary on outside city limits on Mile Hill Drive. That drew conflicting views from two city officials. The city's development director says he'll deny any occupancy permit that says anything about "marijuana." On the other hand, the police chief feels the referral service -- with no marijuana on the premises -- should be allowed. In passing the moratorium, the council's hope is that in this Legislature, a bill will be passed to clarify requirements and restrictions for operating medical marijuana businesses in the state, legalized by voters in 1998. A similar moratorium was passed in Poulsbo, and many other jurisdictions have done the same. Unfortunately, the Legislature so far hasn't inspired much confidence in its ability to provide the kind of leadership the cities need. A Senate bill passed 29-20, and it barely was cleared out of a House committee with a 6-5 vote. To pass out of the committee, it picked up a number of changes -- a county-by-county quota of dispensaries, licenses issued by lottery, and no pot-only physician practices. What all this adds up to is emotionally and politically tinged confusion. What's needed instead is a thoughtful, medically and legally based approach that allows medical marijuana businesses to operate, appropriately regulated. That's what voters deserve after legalizing medical marijuana more than a dozen years ago -- and it's what cities need to enable that will within their jurisdictions. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake