Pubdate: Tue, 19 Jun 2012 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2012 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.utsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Author: Christopher Cadelago MEDICAL POT FAILS TO MAKE BALLOT Supporters Gathered Less Than a Third of Signatures Required to Put Initiative Before Voters in November SAN DIEGO - A proposed ballot measure to regulate medical marijuana dispensaries and impose a tax on storefront operators in the city of San Diego will not go before voters in November, the proponents said Monday. Citizens for Patient Rights, in connection with the Patient Care Association, were unsuccessful in securing the required 62,057 signatures by Monday's deadline to qualify the initiative. The number of signatures collected was less than 20,000, organizers said. Dispensary directors reported running up against a host of difficulties, including the massive crackdown by federal prosecutors and related actions by the city attorney, which severely depleted the organization's ranks and impeded the flow of money to signature gatherers and other campaign expenses. "The problem you always encounter with these efforts is that they are extremely expensive," said Jessica McElfresh, an attorney who worked with the Patient Care Association to draft the proposal. Membership in the trade organization plummeted in recent months to five from 60 collectives. "We had a lot of public support," said Cynara Velazquez, political consultant for the dispensary association. But the glut of statewide initiatives competing for the fall ballot raised the cost of paid signature gatherers, Velazquez said. "We just couldn't compete monetarily," she said. The same group last year collected more than 40,000 signatures to successfully repeal a city ordinance that medical marijuana dispensary directors and patients believed was too restrictive. They plan to pursue another initiative or to work with the new city council and mayor to pass regulations after the fall election. Scott Chipman, chairman of San Diegans for Safe Neighborhoods, said it has become clear to a large number of residents that the medical marijuana industry has been hiding behind sick people and exploiting the compassion of voters to make money. "For too long we have tolerated drug dealers selling from retail stores in San Diego," Chipman said. "We are pleased that there was insufficient support to even put this issue on the ballot in San Diego, and we urge the voters of other county municipalities to reject the permitting and regulating of these illegal and harmful businesses." Over the next few months, collective directors said, they will focus on Encinitas, Del Mar, Solana Beach, Lemon Grove and La Mesa, where they have proposed similar initiatives. Proponents said they recently submitted enough signatures to qualify a measure in Del Mar and will follow though with the other cities in the coming weeks. The new rules would limit storefront dispensaries to commercial and industrial areas and levy a 2.5 percent tax on retail transactions. They also would allow cities to recover their expenses, establish security measures and hours of operation and require licensing by existing city departments. "This is a way of starting to have a regulated market that can serve as a model and then expand," Velazquez said. A separate group of medical marijuana supporters - led by a local chapter of Americans for Safe Access - indicated last week that more than 15 percent of registered voters in Imperial Beach had signed a petition to force a public vote on whether to repeal the city's dispensary ban. [sidebar] 62,057 Number of signatures required to qualify the San Diego initiative on medical marijuana. Fewer than 20,000 signatures were received. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom