Pubdate: Mon, 07 May 2012
Source: Visalia Times-Delta, The (CA)
Copyright: 2012 The Visalia Times-Delta
Contact: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/customerservice/contactus.html
Website: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2759
Author: David Castellon

TULARE COUNTY SUPERVISORS TO WEIGH MEDICAL MARIJUANA ISSUES

The Tulare County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will consider 
adopting a new method to get tough on violators of the county's 
medical-marijuana ordinance.

In addition, it'll vote on whether to oppose a California Assembly 
bill that could change how growing and distributing medical marijuana 
is regulated.

AB 2312 was passed by the Assembly Committee on Public Safety last 
month but hasn't come up for a full vote.

Its author, Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, states on his website that 
the bill would create "the first statewide regulatory framework for 
the medical cannabis industry in California."

Among the provisions of the "Medical Marijuana Program Act" is 
establishing a registration system for commercial growers and 
distributors of medical marijuana and creating a Board of Medical 
Marijuana Enforcement under the state Department of Consumer Affairs 
to regulate those businesses.

"The bill would preempt local laws regarding the regulation and 
control of medical marijuana and would prohibit a medical-marijuana 
facility," the bill states.

But Debbie Vaughn, an administrative analyst for Tulare County, said 
the bill has flaws that includes not requiring noncommercial growers 
- - people who grow medical marijuana just for themselves, in their own 
backyards - to register.

"In 2011, Tulare County had eight homicides related to medical 
marijuana, several of which occurred at private residences," states a 
draft copy of a letter opposing the bill prepared by the office of 
the county's chief administrative officer, Jean Rousseau.

Rousseau couldn't be reached for comment Friday, but a CAO report to 
the supervisors states marijuana growing, distribution and use remain 
crimes under federal law, despite California's 1996 Compassionate 
Care Act, which allows marijuana use for medicinal purposes in the state.

"Implementation of the act has been problematic for local governments 
due to the lack of clarity of the act in addressing many key points," 
stated the CAO's report.

The letter is addressed to Assemblyman Felipe Fuentes, D-Sylmar, 
chairman of the Assembly Appropriations Committee. It states AB 2312 
doesn't resolve "fundamental problems" between California's law and 
federal laws on medical marijuana.

It goes on to say the bill would restrict law enforcement from 
expending any money in cooperation with federal authorities to 
enforce marijuana laws.

"It is impractical to expect that this type of requirement can be 
met," states the CAO's report.

The letter cites another provision of AB 2312 that cities or counties 
couldn't regulate registered, commercial medical-marijuana operations 
- - including restrictions on where they can be located - if doing so 
would result in no dispensaries in areas with at least 50,000 residents.

Tulare County's medical-marijuana ordinance requires that 
medical-marijuana gardens - large or small - and clubs that 
distribute the drugs to patients can operate only on land zoned for 
commercial use in the unincorporated county, not agricultural or 
residential zones.

The CAO's report states that Ammiano's bill would restrict local 
government control and notes that the Medical Marijuana Enforcement 
Board would dictate security requirements for commercial operations, 
with no security requirements for home growers.

The county's ordinance has security requirements, but some growers 
and users of medical marijuana have accused the supervisors of 
creating rules that are too costly and complicated to follow.

Vaughn wouldn't comment on the reasoning behind the ordinances, 
except to say that, "Keeping the community safe is part of the reason 
you have code requirements."

Also during their weekly meeting Tuesday, the supervisors will 
consider a request from the county Resource Management Agency to 
amend the county's code enforcement procedures on medical-marijuana growing.

If approved, county officials would for the first time use 
administrative code enforcement proceedings that could lead to a 
series of penalties that include $100-a-day fines for each violation 
of the county's medical marijuana ordinance.

And county officials say they could cite each plant at a grow site as 
an individual violation.

In addition, Mike Spata, assistant director of planning for RMA, said 
his agency is asking the supervisors to approve streamlining the 
proceedings, so cases can be handled in a little more than 40 days, 
about a third of the time it would take using existing procedures.

The changes are part of an effort by the county to make it harder for 
people to violate the medical-marijuana ordinance, but some people 
believe these efforts are hurting people with legitimate medical 
needs for marijuana to treat pain and other ailments.

One of them is Tammy Murray, director and chief executive officer of 
the Compassionate Care Information Center in Goshen, which she 
describes as a "cannabis club" where people with medical-marijuana 
recommendations who can't or don't want to grow their medicine can get it.

Murray said she has an agreement with 35 growers in Tulare County to 
supply cannabis to the club, and they're complying with the county's ordinance.

Still, many of them are nervous about being treated as if they're 
criminals by federal and local law enforcement, as well as county officials.

In fact, on Friday, Murray was notified that her group is getting 
evicted from its leased building after their landlord received a 
letter stating that federal authorities were aware of the activities 
there and warned the property could be seized if federal law is being 
violated there.

Murray said she believes she had a good relationship with the Tulare 
County Sheriff's Department, but federal officials took notice of the 
club after three men robbed it of marijuana and money at gunpoint on April 18.

Murray said she was in Washington, D.C., at the time, meeting with 
the staff of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, seeking support for 
legislation that would create an exception in federal drug laws so 
cannabis clubs can more easily operate in states that allow 
medicinal-marijuana use.

She said nobody was hurt in the robbery, and she has since hired a 
security guard.

Clubs that operate in legal, ethical manners are important, Murray 
said, because many people who suffer bad side effects from 
prescription medications or find them ineffective find they have 
fewer, if any, such problems using marijuana, said Murray, who uses 
marijuana to treat an anxiety disorder and pain.

It also can be far less expensive than pills and other drugs, she said.

"I do this to help people," Murray said, adding that her club 
supports a lot of people who follow the rules and shouldn't be 
targeted by authorities.

And, it's in the county's interest to allow legally-authorized 
cannabis clubs, she said, as it keeps people who need medical 
marijuana from supporting the illegal drug trade to get it.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom