Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jan 2012 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2012 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/letters_form.html Website: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Janet Zimmerman Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries MEDICAL MARIJUANA USERS FEAR CLOSURE OF DISPENSARIES Shortly after rising each day, Ramon Armendariz takes a few puffs of marijuana from a glass pipe to ease pain from the herniated discs in his back. Later, he sprays a concentrated solution made from the cannabis plant on his aching back and on inflamed blisters brought on by the shingles virus. The drug, he says, allows him to walk with the help of a cane and relieves some of his physical misery from old sports injuries and numerous car accidents. And marijuana leaves him more alert than prescription medications like Percocet and OxyContin, he said. "It levels out the pain so it's something in the background and not something dominant," said Armendariz, 61, a former chef who has been unable to work since 1990. He is among the thousands of people who hold medical marijuana cards under California's Prop. 215, approved by voters in 1996. While the state allows it, many entities do not. Earlier this month, Riverside County supervisors voted to take legal action against 36 dispensaries in unincorporated areas unless they shut down voluntarily. Future action could include seizing property under anti-drug laws. In the last week, county attorneys filed for an injunction to shut down Platinum Collective in Home Gardens and issued a subpoena ordering the operator of the Compassion and Wellness Center in Lakeland Village and the property owner to appear before the board of supervisors next month to explain why the business is still operating. San Bernardino County and more than 250 California cities, including Riverside, Jurupa Valley, San Jacinto, San Bernardino, Lake Elsinore, Beaumont, Perris, Hesperia, Colton and Corona, have taken similar action. Federal agencies also have been cracking down on dispensaries, saying the law was not intended to support large-scale growing operations and stores. The trend has patients like Armendariz worried. Coachella, where he lives, has no dispensaries. Once a week he hitches a ride with his wife or friends to the nearest dispensary, about 12 miles away in Thousand Palms. Once the county begins forcing closures, Armendariz said, he will have to travel three times as far to the nearest legal dispensaries, in Palm Springs, where they are allowed. The inconvenience won't keep him from using the drug, and if the shops are driven out of business, Armendariz said he will turn to street dealers. Questioning need Medical marijuana advocates say the crackdowns will have a devastating effect on patients who depend on cannabis to relieve chronic pain, insomnia, migraines, fibromyalgia, loss of appetite, nausea from chemotherapy and other health problems. Prices will go up and, without legal access, patients likely will turn to drug dealers for their supply, fueling organized crime, advocates said. Under the Compassionate Use Act, patients with a medical marijuana recommendation from a doctor are allowed to grow their own. But many say they can't or won't. "Some people are learning to grow their own, but that will be a minority. Growing indoors takes skill, and outside, once the neighborhood kids find you're growing marijuana, you can kiss it goodbye," said activist Lanny Swerdlow, a registered nurse and board member of a Riverside dispensary that has appealed its closure to the California Supreme Court. Growing pot at home would limit the variety available. Different strains from Easy Rider to Mauwie Wauwie - help different ailments, advocates say. The crackdowns could fuel an increase in mobile delivery services like those found on www.potmobile.com, they said. But it is only a matter of time before they also become targets, said Abrahim Robbin, 27, a director at the Inland Valley Therapeutic Healing Centers in Thousand Palms, which will close under the new county policy. "The narcotics officers, police officers and sheriffs are going to be busy, because the streets are going to be so badly infested with the real drug trafficking. The Mexican mafia are the ones that will rise up from this," he said. The president of the California State Sheriff's Association, Mark Pazin, disagreed, and said people without law enforcement experience are quick to bring up drug cartels, which already exist and thrive. Patients who genuinely need relief from serious and terminal ailments such as cancer should use Marinol, an FDA-approved synthetic marijuana pill, he said. "Just because somebody had a bad day or got a boo-boo on their knee, they get a medical marijuana card so they can smoke this junk," said Pazin, the Merced County sheriff. "They are taking advantage of this." Opponents who support a ban say dispensaries increase crime in neighborhoods and set a bad example for children. Riverside County Supervisor Marion Ashley called for a crackdown on doctors who issue medical marijuana cards to those without a serious illness. About 400 one-year medical marijuana cards were issued in Riverside and San Bernardino counties for 2011-2012, according to the state Department of Public Health. Healthy young adults obtain medical marijuana recommendations so they can buy the drug and resell it, said Paul Chabot, president of the Coalition for a Drug-Free California and founder of the Inland Valley Drug-Free Community Coalition. Chabot experimented with marijuana and alcohol when he was 12, but got clean during a 36-day residential treatment program, he said. Chabot questioned the benefits of medical marijuana for many conditions, such as glaucoma, and said those who need it can grow their own. "This is not what California voters voted for. They thought they were helping terminally ill people," said Chabot, 37, of Rancho Cucamonga. "These pot stores are nothing more than domestic marijuana cartels." 'I benefit from it' At the Inland Valley Patients' Health and Wellness Center in a Riverside industrial center, people arrive in a steady stream for an afternoon seminar on growing marijuana at home. The 6,000-member dispensary is waiting to hear whether the state's high court will hear its case against closure. In the meantime, the Fourth District Court of Appeal has issued a stay on the city's effort to oust the business. Consultant and cultivator Ruben De Leon, 23, himself a medical marijuana user, said the center strictly abides by requirements of the Compassionate Use Act by having patients show their doctor recommendation upon entering. An armed security guard scans patients with a metal detector before they are allowed into a back room where numerous strains of marijuana buds, like Banana Frost and Grape Ape, are kept in jars. Coolers hold $5 pot brownies and $8 apple cinnamon rolls. Business at the dispensary could pick up once Riverside County officials start closing stores in unincorporated areas, he said. De Leon has been using marijuana since 2007 for pain from a car accident that left him with two broken legs. Prescription pain killers made him nauseous, constipated and zombie-like, he said. De Leon pulls up his pants leg to show jagged scars from reconstructive surgery on his right knee. "I know I'm young, but looks can be deceiving. I have a legitimate reason to use it and I benefit from it," he said. Anne Watts, 61, of unincorporated Highgrove, borrows a car or takes the bus to dispensaries in Riverside a couple of times a week for anxiety disorders and a degenerative joint disease that affects her back. She spends about $60 a week. She gets almost immediate relief after smoking it through a water pipe, starting first thing in the morning. "When you wait 30 or 45 minutes for a pill to kick in, I've already got the benefits by that time and I don't have to take an addictive pill. Depending on the pain level, usually in the evening I'll be hurting pretty bad and I medicate again," she said. Watts, who has four grown children, said she isn't sure what she'll do if the dispensaries close. She doesn't know enough about growing her own. "I guess I'll have to go sit on the supervisors' front door," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom