Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2014 Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) Copyright: 2014 The Desert Sun Contact: http://www.desertsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Note: Does not accept LTEs from outside circulation area. Author: Reza Gostar MARIJUANA SHOPS COULD BE LEFT TO CATHEDRAL CITY VOTERS CATHEDRAL CITY - City Council members were divided Wednesday on whether to permit medical marijuana dispensaries to operate in this city, but they did agree that the issue should go before voters. The council directed city staff to draft an ordinance by July for council consideration. If approved, the initiative would be placed on the November ballot where voters would decide if medical marijuana dispensaries will be allowed to operate within city limits. "I think we should be legalizing dispensaries and I've held that opinion from the start," said Councilman Greg Pettis. "We anticipate Desert Hot Springs putting it on their council agenda. We can't just pretend this is something not happening in the valley." Highlighting Colorado's marijuana laws as an example, Councilman Sam Toles said: "Denver did not fall apart and there was no measurable increase in criminal activity." "I, like my colleague, would favor removing the ban and allowing dispensaries to operate as they do in Palm Springs," he added. In 2009, Cathedral City banned medical marijuana dispensaries after city attorneys spent several months in court shutting one down that opened without a permit down the street from City Hall. If a measure is approved by voters, Cathedral City would join Palm Springs, which is currently the only city in Riverside County that permits and taxes medical marijuana dispensaries. In recent months, Desert Hot Springs City Council voiced unanimous support for medical marijuana dispensaries in its city, and directed staff to draft an ordinance for future consideration. But, Desert Hot Springs has yet to return to the issue. During Wednesday's Cathedral City council study session, Mayor Kathy DeRosa said that while she did support the Compassionate Care Act of 1996, which legalized the use of medical marijuana in California, she is not in favor of taxing medicine in order to generate revenues for the city. Until the federal government, which considers medical marijuana and its distribution illegal, takes a stand on the issue, DeRosa said she would not back the measure. However, she said, she would be willing to place it on the ballot. Councilman Stan Henry, who retired in 2010 as the city's police chief, agreed with DeRosa. Henry said that while he does not support the legalization of medical marijuana, he recognizes the need to take the issue to voters. "It is a violation of federal law and being in the career that I have been in the past several years, I have endorsed several laws that I do not agree with," Henry said. However, Henry said he is "in support of letting the community decide." Cathedral City staff will look at Palm Springs' model of taxing marijuana as a starting point for the ordinance, according to city documents. Many municipalities across California, such as Oakland, Long Beach, Los Angeles and San Francisco have allowed the operation of dispensaries and derive revenue from these operations by taxing medical marijuana. In Riverside, voters gathered enough signatures to place an initiative on the ballot that would appeal the city's ban on marijuana collectives but that measure has since been blocked by the city with a lawsuit pending against the Riverside County Registrar's Office. In Palm Springs, where three collectives are allowed by city law, an audit last year found the dispensaries generate about $4.5 million annually. And in February, the Palm Springs City Council approved a fourth dispensary, which is expected to open as soon as July. Dispensaries without a permit in Palm Springs must pay a 15 percent tax rate and are subject to prosecution under the city's municipal code. Previous estimates suggested that Palm Springs could generate $450,000 annually for its tax on the three legal marijuana shops currently in operation. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom