Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jan 2013
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2013 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Maura Dolan
Page: A23

A HAZE OF REGULATIONS

Sixteen years after voters OKD medical marijuana, state high court 
will decide if municipalities can ban cannabis dispensaries.

High court is poised to decide whether medical pot outlets can be 
banned. Sixteen years after Californians approved medical marijuana, 
the state's highest court is poised to decide whether cities and 
counties can ban cannabis dispensaries.

The long-awaited ruling by the California Supreme Court, which hears 
arguments on the issue Feb. 5, follows years of contradictory 
decisions by the lower courts operating in a void because the state 
Legislature has yet to define the law or pass detailed regulations.

If the court upholds bans passed by more than 200 local governments, 
as some legal analysts expect, more such measures are likely to be adopted.

The court also could clarify other parts of the state's medical 
marijuana law, though no one expects its pronouncement to end the confusion.

"This is a subject matter that requires detailed regulations, and the 
California Legislature hasn't done the job," said Alex Kreit, a law 
professor who has advised San Diego on medical marijuana law.

Kreit pointed out that Colorado implemented its medical marijuana law 
with hundreds of regulations in a "fairly smooth process." California 
legislators have yet to adopt requirements for state licensing and 
labeling of marijuana, among other issues.

That has left judges struggling to interpret the law and local 
governments uncertain of how to enforce it. Prosecutors also have 
been vexed. Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris sent letters to legislative 
leaders in 2011 pleading for action.

"For some reason, the perception in Sacramento has been that this 
will go away, that this is radioactive, so there has been a lack of 
leadership and commitment on the issue," said Assemblyman Tom Ammiano 
(D-San Francisco), who last year introduced a bill to regulate 
medical marijuana. "That is changing."

While such cities as San Francisco and Oakland moved quickly to 
regulate medical marijuana, others, such as Los Angeles, failed to 
act immediately and were inundated with dispensaries, Kreit said. 
Once in place, the medical marijuana providers sued cities that tried 
to regulate them.

"Every dot of an 'i' and every cross of a 't' is litigated here in 
Los Angeles," said Los Angeles Special Assistant City Atty. Jane 
Usher. "Nothing has gone unchallenged. Any time you try to regulate, 
hold on to your hat because you will spend the next two or three 
years in litigation - which makes a ban look really appealing."

The California Supreme Court, in a handful of medical marijuana 
decisions, has generally interpreted the law narrowly, in one case 
upholding the right of employers to fire workers who use marijuana 
with a doctor's recommendation, even without evidence of impaired performance.

The Legislature's limited guidance consists of a law passed in 2003 - 
seven years after Proposition 215 legalized marijuana for medical 
purposes - that established identification cards for medical 
marijuana users. A subsequent law passed in 2010 banned dispensaries 
near schools and said cities and counties could otherwise regulate 
their location, operation and establishment.

Advocates of medical cannabis insist that regulating does not mean 
banning. They point out that the written intent of the state law was 
to provide uniformity among counties and make medical marijuana 
available to patients.

Cities and counties counter that the language of the law implies a 
ban is permissible. They also argue that the state Constitution gives 
them the right to decide local land use matters and contend that 
federal law, which makes marijuana illegal, preempts state law.

Former California Supreme Court Justice Carlos R. Moreno, who 
participated in the medical marijuana rulings, said he believes the 
court is likely to uphold bans in "appropriate" circumstances.

Kreit, who directs the Center for Law and Social Justice at the 
Thomas Jefferson School of Law, agreed that the medical marijuana 
advocates face the higher hurdle. Although the issue has divided the 
courts of appeal, more rulings than not have upheld bans.

"If they are allowed to ban dispensaries, there will be thousands of 
medical marijuana patients who will be out of luck and will have to 
turn to the black market," said Joe Elford, chief legal counsel for a 
medical marijuana advocacy organization.

The state high court's decision on bans is not likely to end the 
litigation. The law requires medical marijuana suppliers to operate 
not for profit, and Kreit foresees future litigation over what that means.

An appeals court ruled in December that dispensaries are not illegal 
just because they are large and have many customers, a finding that 
contradicted the contentions of federal prosecutors trying to close a 
major dispensary in Oakland.

But the appeals court also said the dispensary's owner might be 
violating the law if prosecutors can show he was operating for a profit.

Ammiano said his proposed regulations, based on those suggested by 
Gov. Jerry Brown when he was attorney general, would provide tight 
regulation and taxation of dispensaries. He said he is hopeful, but 
not certain, that he can win passage this year.

In the meantime, advocates are considering going back to voters. Many 
anticipate that Californians will be asked to legalize marijuana on 
the 2014 ballot.

Under the current law, "it is chaos," Ammiano said. "What we want to 
do is provide some order."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom