Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jan 2012 Source: Burlington County Times (NJ) Copyright: 2012 Calkins Newspapers. Inc. Contact: https://phillyburbs-dot-com.bloxcms-ny1.com/contact/ Website: http://www.phillyburbs.com/news/local/burlington_county_times_news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2128 WESTAMPTON BOARD DENIES MEDICAL MARIJUANA OPERATION WESTAMPTON -- New Jersey may have legalized marijuana for medical purposes, but members of a township land use board decided it shouldn't be grown and dispensed from a Hancock Lane warehouse that is near an age-restricted housing development. Compassionate Care Foundation Inc. had sought the township Land Development Board's approval to open a medical marijuana growing and dispensing operation in the 40,000 square-foot warehouse off Hancock Lane. The group is one of six nonprofit groups selected by the state Department of Health and Senior Services to grow and dispense medical marijuana to patients with debilitating illnesses. But the board shot down the group's proposal Wednesday, first rejecting its appeal that a medical marijuana operation complies with the building's existing zoning and then denying the group's request for a use variance for that purpose. The board voted 4-3 against the zoning appeal and 5-2 against the use variance. The second vote followed a public hearing where about a dozen residents from the nearby Fernbrooke age-restricted housing community spoke against the project. Most of the residents said they were sympathetic to the sick people who want the drug, but they were adamant that the proposed location was too close to their residential community. Several said they feared the marijuana operation would attract criminals and drug addicts to their neighborhood and cause their property values to decline. "My major concern is location, location, location," Fernbrooke resident Robert Lee said during the hearing. "This is the worst place to put it." Compassionate Care Foundation chief executive officer Bill Thomas and other representatives from the nonprofit insisted that the operation would attract only sick patients and that security at the site would be tight, with exterior and interior cameras and armed guards. The organization has also offered to pay for a gate and guard at the Fernbrooke entrance or other security upgrades the residents might desire. After the meeting, Thomas said the group would appeal the board's denial to Superior Court. "They decided not to follow the law and to follow emotion," Thomas said, adding that the building was perfect for a marijuana growing operation and worth a court fight. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D