Pubdate: Sun, 20 Dec 2015 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 2015 Los Angeles Times Contact: http://www.latimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248 Author: Patrick McGreevy LAW HAS CITIES SCRAMBLING State Rules for Pot Dispensaries Created Deadline in Error. SACRAMENTO - A mistake in drafting new state regulations for medical marijuana in California has cities and counties scrambling to ban or restrict dispensaries before a March 1 deadline - after which, they fear, more lax state rules may apply. Assemblyman Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg), an author of legislation setting new rules for the industry, said the deadline was inserted into the bill in error, and he plans emergency legislation next month to remove it. Medical cannabis dispensaries have been banned in recent weeks in 19 cities, including Antioch, Artesia, La Canada Flintridge, Newport Beach, Palm Desert and Pasadena. Dozens of the other 463 cities in the state are considering new bans or restrictions, creating panic among those who support medical marijuana. "During the scramble at the end of the legislative session this year, an inadvertent drafting error placed a deadline on local jurisdictions," Wood wrote to the state's cities and counties. "My intent to remove the deadline has bipartisan and stakeholder support." The promise of an emergency fix was welcomed by Dale Gieringer, executive director of California NORML, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, which supports the legalization of marijuana. "This letter should help cool down local officials who have been stampeding to restrict cultivation without adequate consideration," Gieringer said Friday. California voters approved a ballot measure nearly 20 years ago that legalized the sale of medical marijuana to patients in the state, but it was not until Oct. 9 of this year that Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation creating state regulations for the growth, transport and sale of cannabis. The state law says that local cities and counties can adopt their own rules. Voters in Los Angeles did so in 2013, approving a measure that calls for a sharply reduced number of pot shops as well as taxes on those operating legally. Wood said he hopes to have the emergency legislation signed and in effect before March 1. If action takes place afterward, he said he believes there is solid legal ground for cities continuing to have local control once the law is approved. Industry officials say cities should be given more time to consider the pros and cons of regulatory schemes. "When localities rush to ban cannabis activity they not only deny their patient residents access to compassionate care, they also lose critical tax revenues and open the door for dangerous illicit activity to take root in their communities," said Keith McCarty, chief executive of Eaze Solutions, a technology firm that helps medical marijuana patients gain access to pot. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom