Pubdate: Wed, 18 Mar 2015 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2015 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/letters_form.html Website: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Ben Boychuk WAR OF WORDS OVER MEDICAL MARIJUANA The city of Riverside's medical marijuana initiative will enrich shady criminal pot peddlers at the expense of public safety and kids. Or the June 2 ballot measure will bring much-needed regulation to some businesses that have been operating in a legal gray area for years. It really just depends on whom you ask. Language is everything. Turns out, Riverside residents don't object to legalization in theory. But when confronted with specific policy proposals, voters start getting a bit skittish. Measure A, backed by the Riverside chapter of a national advocacy group called Americans for Safe Access, would undo the city's ban on pot dispensaries and impose certain licensing and security requirements, as well as criminal background checks, on dispensary owners. The measure would also bar a dispensary from opening within 1,000 feet of a school, residential neighborhood or park. City officials greatly dislike medical marijuana dispensaries and dislike Measure A even more. The city's official ballot argument against the initiative is a forceful indictment. It would make mobile marijuana deliveries legal, "increasing the likelihood that drugs end up in the hands of our children." Furthermore, the city posits that the 1,000-foot barrier is more of a bug than a feature because that distance is "just a few blocks away." Pretty persuasive, no? The measure's proponents seem to think so. Jason Thompson, the attorney who fought the city last year when it tried to block the measure from appearing on the ballot, on Monday filed an emergency writ in Riverside County Superior Court asking a judge to strike several words and phrases from the city's ballot argument against Measure A. "The judicially noticeable evidence annexed hereto provides clear and convincing proof that the language in question is false and deceptive, thereby warranting issuance of the relief prayed for herein," the petition reads. When I spoke with Thompson last week, he didn't couch his complaints in such staid legalese. "Their ballot argument is full of lies and glaring misrepresentations," he told me. "They say the measure was drafted by dispensary owners," Thompson said. "No, it was drafted by me." In fact, Thompson has written similar ballot measures for South El Monte and Yucca Valley, where residents will also vote June 2. "They say the measure puts profits before the community," he continued. "No, state law says all dispensaries must be nonprofit." That one may be true, technically speaking. In reality, California's medical marijuana industry isn't charity; it's a nearly $1 billion business. Somebody is making money somewhere. Thompson also objects to the city's contention that Measure A requires neither criminal background checks for dispensary owners nor security cameras accessible to the Riverside Police Department. That simply isn't true, he says. The initiative's language specifies that dispensaries must cooperate with police investigations. Maybe above all, Thompson dislikes the city's general tactics in opposing Measure A. "It's an emotional issue for a lot of people," Thompson told me. "People want to have an honest conversation." The city attorney was evaluating Thompson's writ and had no comment Tuesday. "'Medical' is a pretext," Thompson told me. "If the city wants dispensaries closed, fine. But people aren't smoking any less marijuana." He's right. Although Californians in 1996 passed the Compassionate Use Act in the belief it would help ease the suffering of terminally ill patients, it wasn't long before patients were obtaining the pot cure for all manner of maladies real and imagined. As comedian Seth Rogen once joked, he got his prescription for a specific ailment: "It's called 'I ain't got no weed on me right now.'" The truth is, the moment the feds decided not to crush state medical marijuana laws in their infancy, the legalization debate was effectively over. Congress eliminated funding for enforcement last year, and is now considering legislation to legalize medicinal marijuana nationwide. It's true that California's Supreme Court handed Riverside a nominal victory in 2013 when the justices ruled that cities have the power to ban medical marijuana dispensaries. But the judges acknowledged theirs would not be the last word: "nothing prevents future efforts by the Legislature, or by the People, to adopt a different approach." On June 2, Riverside voters will have the opportunity to adopt a much different approach assuming they can discern the facts from the arguments. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom