Pubdate: Thu, 15 Oct 2015 Source: Albany Democrat-Herald (OR) Copyright: 2015 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/HPOp5PfB Website: http://www.democratherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/7 LET VOTERS MAKE THE CALL ON POT BAN So, maybe the Albany City Council didn't intend to talk about marijuana at its meeting Wednesday night after all. That's OK. But it's becoming clear how the council should talk about marijuana when it finally returns to the issue in a work session scheduled for Nov. 2. You might have followed some of the council's gyrations on the issue, which date back to the good old days, when all we were worried about was the location of the dispensaries allowed by state law to serve medical marijuana patients. The issues have only become more complicated since then, especially when voters statewide approving Ballot Measure 91, which legalized the use (and eventual sale) of recreational marijuana. It's fair to say that the Albany City Council is divided on the issue. Mayor Sharon Konopa, who gets to cast a vote only when the council is tied, has long worried about the impact of dispensaries (and now, potentially, recreational pot retail outlets) on neighborhoods. Other councilors share Konopa's concerns and have expressed additional doubts about the impact of legalized marijuana in Albany. But still other councilors note that the state's voters made their decision on the question when they approved Measure 91, and argue that any additional restrictions Albany might place on marijuana are futile attempts to swim against the tide. Lately, the council has considered proposals that could increase the zoning and regulatory hoops that marijuana businesses would need to jump through before they opened in Albany. (It also has, like other cities and counties, banned dispensaries from the early sale of recreational pot.) There's a better way for the city to move forward on this, though, and the outlines of that approach started to become clear at a council work session on Monday. (Councilors at that meeting suggested that they would resume the conversation at their Wednesday meeting, but apparently changed their minds before that meeting.) The Legislature allows communities like Albany to ban the sale of recreational marijuana. There's a catch, though: In Albany's case, any such ban must be ratified by voters in an election that likely would be held in November 2016. At the same time the council moves forward on a ban, however, it should rescind its decision blocking existing dispensaries from the early sales of recreational marijuana. Here's why: Albany voters narrowly voted in favor of Measure 91 in the November 2014 election. Konopa has argued that if voters had a full understanding of how the measure would play out (in particular, that it would not create the amount of tax revenue for cities that some voters thought it might), they might reconsider that judgment. That might be true. But it also likely is true that Albany voters would be able to collect additional information about pot sales by watching what happens if dispensaries get the green light to join the early sales. The council could continue dreaming up new regulatory hurdles to toss in the way of recreational pot sales. Or it could let voters make the final call. The latter approach is simpler and cleaner, although it would force the council to find other topics to discuss for the next year or so. (mm) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom