Pubdate: Wed, 14 Feb 2018 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 2018 Los Angeles Times Contact: http://www.latimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248 Author: Sarah Parvini BERKELEY DECLARES ITSELF A SANCTUARY CITY FOR RECREATIONAL CANNABIS -- AND IT MAY BE THE FIRST TO DO SO Berkeley may be the first city to declare itself a cannabis sanctuary city. A customer shops at marijuana dispensary MedMen in West Hollywood in January. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times) The Berkeley City Council voted unanimously to declare the city a sanctuary for recreational marijuana, a move that may be the first of its kind. The resolution, adopted Tuesday, prohibits Berkeley's agencies and employees from using city resources to assist in enforcing federal marijuana laws or providing information on legal cannabis activities. "The city of Berkeley does not support cooperation with the Drug Enforcement Administration in its efforts to undermine state and local marijuana laws," the measure says. Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin said the move was a response to "threats by Atty. Gen. [Jeff] Sessions regarding a misguided crackdown on our democratic decision to legalize recreational cannabis." Arreguin, Councilman Ben Bartlett and Councilwoman Cheryl Davila authored the resolution. "We have become what may be the first city in the country to declare ourselves a sanctuary city for cannabis," Arreguin tweeted. Sessions ended an Obama-era federal policy that provided legal shelter for marijuana sales in California and five other states that have allowed recreational pot in January. The 2013 policy, known as the "Cole memorandum," provided clarity not just to marijuana businesses and users, but also to state and local law enforcement agencies, which now could find themselves working at cross purposes with their federal counterparts. Berkeley has a long history of lenient marijuana laws. In 1979, voters passed the Berkeley Marijuana Initiative, which called for the city's Police Department to make the possession, cultivation, sale and transportation of marijuana the lowest law enforcement priority. Decades later, in 2008, the City Council declared Berkeley a sanctuary for medical cannabis patients and providers. California voters paved the way for recreational marijuana in November 2016, with Proposition 64 earning 57% approval statewide. Support was much higher in Berkeley, where 83% of voters supported the measure, according to city officials. The ballot measure made California one of eight states to approve the sale of cannabis for recreational use. Those 21 and older can purchase and possess up to an ounce of marijuana for recreational use and grow up to six plants in their homes. "Berkeley has always been a sanctuary city," said Councilman Bartlett. "When Jeff Sessions announced he was repealing Obama era protections on states' rights in regards to cannabis, we decided to step up." The new resolution plays an "imperative" role in preventing "federal overreach," he said. "We will not allow the return of Prohibition," he said. "It destroys communities of color, thwarts the will of the people and prevents a health economy from manifesting." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt