Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jul 2015
Source: Sun, The (Yuma, AZ)
Copyright: 2015 The Sun
Contact: http://www.yumasun.com/sections/opinion/submit-letters/
Website: http://www.yumasun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1258
Author: Cesar Neyoy, Bajo El Sol

SAN LUIS COUNCIL OKS MEDICAL POT DISPENSARY

SAN LUIS, Ariz. - Having gained the city council's approval this 
week, a medical marijuana dispensary could open sometime in 2016, 
pending the OK from the state.

Finding no legal reasons to block the venture, the San Luis City 
Council on Wednesday approved two conditional use permits sought by 
Choice Cannabis, one to operate the dispensary on Archibald Street, 
next to the border, and the second to cultivate marijuana in an 
industrial building located along Highway 95 on the city's north side.

The permit requests brought to City Hall a crowd of about 50 
residents, including members of religious organizations opposing the 
dispensary. In an prolonged public comment period that preceded the 
vote on the permits, most speakers voiced objections to dispensary, 
among them Jose Luis Arandilla.

"This issue is very important," he said. "We don't want a community 
plagued by trash, we don't want the dispensary here. We don't need 
it, and we have never needed it."

In an interview following the vote, the agent for Choice Cannabis, 
Curtis Devine, said the company will take steps put residents' minds at ease.

"We understand their concerns," he said. "We will hold a community 
meeting to answer them. We want them to understand what medicinal 
marijuana really is about. We hope to have a dialogue with the 
community in the near future and respond to their questions, to 
educate them about how we operate and the benefits of medicinal 
marijuana. And we hope to open their eyes."

He pledged that the dispensary, once established, will be active in 
community affairs, becoming an active sponsor in a variety of causes 
that benefit the city.

Devine said the opening date for the dispensary will depend on how 
long it takes to complete requirements for licensing from the Arizona 
Department of Health Services, a process he said could continue at 
least through the remainder of this year.

The dispensary would be the first in south Yuma County following 
approval by Arizona voters of a 2010 ballot initiative allowing the 
use of physician-prescribed marijuana for use in treating patients 
approved by DHS. But the debate in San Luis over medicinal pot could 
soon play out again in Somerton, where Pangea Research LLC announced 
it is seeking a state license and city approval to open a dispensary 
in the Yepco industrial park on the city's west side.

Choice Cannabis, listed on Arizona Corporation Commission's website 
as having a Mohave Valley, Ariz., address, was granted its request 
for the permit for the dispensary at 708 N. Archibald St. on a 5-2 
vote, with council members Ruben Walshe and Maria Ramos dissenting.

With Walshe dissenting again, the commission voted 6-1 to authorized 
a permit for a cultivation site in the former Meadowcraft factory 
building on Highway 95, where marijuana would be grown for the 
dispensary in San Luis and others in the region.

The council approved the permits with the conditions that Choice 
Cannabis employ full-time security guards at the locations, and that 
parking at the dispensary be reserved for patients and not be used by 
employees.

The city planning and zoning commission previously recommended denial 
of the permit for the dispensary  not out of opposition to medicinal 
marijuana but because of concerns the dispensary would not have 
sufficient parking and that it could aggravate traffic congestion downtown.

Indeed, the council had no legal authority to prohibit the 
dispensary, given that Choice Cannabis had met all of the city's 
zoning requirements, Mayor Gerardo Sanchez told residents gathered 
for Wednesday's meeting.

"I, like you, am opposed to medical marijuana," he said. "I voted 
against the ballot proposition, but it passed in the state. We can't 
say 'no,' because it was the decision of Arizona voters. We have to 
uphold the state Constitution, and this law is part of that."

Law or not, Walshe said he feared how a vote to approve a dispensary 
could be interpreted.

"I voted against it, because it's not the message I would want to 
send as an elected official. As a person who works with children and 
youth of the community, I feel a commitment to them to not send that 
type of message," said Walshe, who teaches music in the San Luis 
school system. "I am aware that it is a state law, but that does not 
change the negative message we are sending to our youth."

Among the few people speaking in favor of the dispensary was resident 
Beatriz Zousa, who said marijuana has reduced the symptoms she has 
suffered over the past three months as a result of encephalitis. She 
said a dispensary would benefit patients in San Luis who otherwise 
will have to travel out of town for marijuana.

Earlier this week, Hector Crisantes, a representative of Pangea 
Research, presented details to Somerton city officials about the 
company's proposal to operate a dispensary in Somerton that not only 
would provide marijuana to patients but focus on research and 
development of "medical-grade" marijuana.

The dispensary, he said, would also include a holistic center, where 
residents could obtain organic foods and attend classes in yoga, 
physical fitness, nutrition and healthy lifestyles.

He described Pangea Research as a family-owned company involved in 
organic horticulture using greenhouses.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom