Source: SF Chron. 7/3/97 Contact: Sonoma County Details Policy for Medical Pot By George Snyder Chronicle North Bay Bureau Bona fide medical marijuana users, and their designated caretakers, will be allowed to cultivate, possess and use the plant to relieve serious health maladies under new Proposition 215 guidelines extended yesterday by the Sonoma County district attorney's office. However, unlike San Francisco, San Jose and Santa Clara County, Sonoma will not allow marijuana buyers' clubs. We're somewhere in the middle of the spectrum in terms of where we stand in our interpretations of the medical marijuana law," said Sonoma County District Attorney Mike Mullins. "We believe that the statute must be implemented, but only for growing for personal use to alleviate a serious illness," Mullins said. "No money will change hands." Mullins said the guidelines were developed after numerous meetings among members of the Sonoma Alliance for Medical Marijuana, Acting Sheriff Jim Piccini and his own office. Other jurisdictions within the county are still studying the guidelines, he said. Both Mullins and community activist Mary Moore, a founder of the Sonoma Alliance for Medical Marijuana, said they worked amicably, along with the county sheriff's department, to come up with the policy. "I'm very, very pleased with the results," said Moore, a Sebastopo1 clothingstore owner and community activist. "We had six months of meetings and we only finished up last Monday. I have to have to credit them with more movement on the issue on their part than ours. I think we are the first county to have worked it out this way." Moore added, however, that finding doctors willing to recommend marijuana is still a hurdle for patients. "Many of them (doctors) are still afraid. We are meeting. next with the director of the county health department to work on that issue," she said. Patients, according to the poliocyan, must be state residents seriously ill with "cancer, anorexia, AIDS, chronic pain, spasticity, glaucoma, arthritis, migraines and any other illness for which marijuana provides relief." They also must be examined by a doctor and have the physician recommend that their health would benefit from using the drug. Caregivers, under the policy must have personal knowledge of the physician's recommendation and cannot use the drug themselves or sell it.