Pubdate: Fri, 08 Jan 2016 Source: Orange County Register, The (CA) Copyright: 2016 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321 Author: Sal Rodriguez HASTY BANS ON MEDICAL POT ONLY SERVE BLACK MARKET Over the 20 years since California voters approved Proposition 215, medical marijuana policy has been left to a patchwork of widely varying local ordinances. Last year, state legislators approved the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act, a trio of bills establishing the first statewide regulations of medical marijuana. The new package of regulations is set to govern the cultivation, manufacturing and licensing of medical marijuana businesses. Local control is mostly intact, with localities free to restrict marijuana cultivation, delivery and businesses. However, an apparently erroneous line in the regulations have sent local governments across the state scrambling to impose bans on medical marijuana cultivation, mobile delivery and dispensaries ahead of a March 1 deadline set by the regulations. Under current reading of the law, local jurisdictions without ordinances regarding cultivation in place by the deadline will thus cede authority over the matter to the state. Further, without explicit prohibitions on mobile delivery, marijuana may be delivered to patients under the law. This has led dozens of governments to impose bans, in part to ensure local control. Just this week, Calistoga, Merced, Paso Robles, Pismo Beach and Tustin were among those moving forward with bans on cultivation and/or deliveries. Some were more sensible, like the city of Riverside, which voted to allow a certain amount of cultivation. But in an open letter to city and county governments, Assemblyman Jim Wood, D-Healdsburg, described the deadline as "an inadvertent drafting error." Wood intends to work with his colleagues to "strike the deadline and maintain a local jurisdiction's ability to create their own regulations." This at least has helped some local governments to indicate that, with the lifting of such a deadline, they would be open to revisiting their ordinances. And they have every reason to. With the deadline almost certain to be removed, local governments should embrace regulation rather than prohibition. Americans for Safe Access, a medical marijuana patient advocacy organization, advises local governments that bans on personal and commercial marijuana cultivation are unnecessary and ultimately harm patients. "Lawmakers must remember that it is inappropriate to regulate medicines as they do vices, including alcohol and tobacco," the group argues in a memo to local governments. Regardless of how one perceives the legitimacy of medical marijuana, the reality is people have, in consultation with physicians, determined that they can benefit from the use of it. While there obviously are instances where eye rolling is perfectly justified, more than 1.4 million Californians have already used medical marijuana, according to ASA 92 percent of who report significant relief from a serious medical condition. If the past four decades of marijuana prohibition have taught us anything, though, it's that simply banning pot doesn't actually prevent people from accessing, growing and selling the stuff. In the context of a state which has opened its arms to marijuana for medicinal use, and which may very well legalize it for recreational use, prohibition is simply an exercise in government power for the sake of exercising government power. Bans on personal cultivation simply hurt those without any other means of getting what they, and their doctor, consider medicine. At best, they push people in areas without commercial cultivation or dispensing into the black market, which doesn't serve any reasonable public policy provision. Bans on commercial cultivation would have the same practical effect. In order for dispensaries to dispense, they need legal, regulated cultivation. As ASA argues, "Licensed commercial medical cannabis cultivators operate in the open. That makes the jobs of regulators and law enforcement much easier." In time, local governments will likely make the right choices. In the meantime, they should resist the urge to panic and impose unnecessary bans which only serve the interests of the black market. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom