Pubdate: Thu, 23 May 2013 Source: San Bernardino Sun (CA) Copyright: 2013 Los Angeles Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.sbsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1417 MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES COULD BE AN OPPORTUNITY In their haste to wave their white hats as they drive medical marijuana dispensaries out of town, San Bernardino authorities are missing an opportunity. The city has been busy raiding and ordering closures of the more than 30 med-pot shops in town since the state Supreme Court ruled May 6 to uphold local prohibitions on dispensaries. Cities and counties statewide have been waiting years for clarity on whether they can ban these businesses that proliferated following voter approval of Proposition 215, which OK'd marijuana for personal medicinal use. Now, with the state court's blessing, authorities are well within their rights to enforce San Bernardino's zoning ordinance outlawing med-pot shops - an ordinance that is a statement, really, about the kinds of businesses and clientele officials hope to attract to San Bernardino's struggling economic corridors. In a town starved for tax revenue - a city, keep in mind, that has made steep cuts in services and filed for municipal bankruptcy - officials would do well to pause and consider whether eradicating all of the city's 33 med-pot shops is truly the right call for San Bernardino. Control over these shops is necessary, of course. The city has one of the highest crime rates regionally, so pushing for any enterprise that could increase crime would be irresponsible. But while authorities consider the ban on dispensaries the best way to clamp down on potential crime, closing every shop and pushing medical marijuana sales underground could in fact increase crime. There must be some acceptance, too, of the fact that California voters have given adults the right to use marijuana for medicinal purposes. Med-pot shops, if regulated properly, stand to be the safest means for meeting the needs of medical marijuana users. Now, San Bernardino does have more than its share of such establishments: Does a city of 200,000 really need 33 medical marijuana dispensaries? Probably not. And San Bernardino is not alone in wishing to keep med-pot shops out of town. More than 180 cities and counties statewide have adopted bans on dispensaries. Many, like San Bernardino, were slapping fines against shops while awaiting a green light from the Supreme Court to take more aggressive action. But there are other cities - Diamond Bar and Needles, for example - that show it's possible to balance their need to regulate a business that officials fear could attract trouble with the rights of medical marijuana users. By regulating and taxing these businesses, theses cities have tapped into a revenue stream other communities have turned off. Again, 33 med-pot shops in one city is overkill. But has anyone at City Hall determined whether it might make financial sense in this bankrupt town to regulate and tax a handful of such stores? There's no need to worry about dispensaries being given carte blanche in San Bernardino, when you consider the leverage the Supreme Court has given it and other cities to hold dispensaries accountable: Follow the rules, or get out of town. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt