LA City Council Votes to Close 800 Marijuana Dispensaries
huffingtonpost.com
Produced by HuffPost's Eyes & Ears Citizen Journalism Unit.The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to close roughly 800 medical marijuana dispensaries in the city by passing the first reading of an ordinance which would also require 75% of remaining dispensaries to relocate. The vote, to be confirmed in a second reading of the ordinance next Tuesday, will radically change the landscape of medical marijuana distribution in Los Angeles, which has been largely unregulated since dispensaries were first authorized by state law in 1996.
If the ordinance takes effect later this spring, medical marijuana dispensaries will have to find locations more than 1000 feet from various 'sensitive uses' -- including churches, public parks, schools, rehab centers, and other dispensaries. They will also be required to grow all their cannabis on-site, test it for pesticides, provide written notice of their existence to all neighbors within 1000 feet, maintain 24-hour complaint hotlines, hire unarmed security guards to patrol a two-block radius, keep 90 days of security footage and fulfill a number of other registration requirements with the city.
Dispensary owners, patients and medical marijuana advocacy groups all say the bill is overly restrictive, and that it relies on the false assumption that medical marijuana dispensaries are a magnet for crime and a menace to residential neighborhoods. Several speakers alluded to LA Chief of Police Charlie Beck's comments last week that "banks are more likely to be robbed than medical marijuana dispensaries," though Beck supports the present ordinance.
Patient William Lahey said that the bill's supporters overstate marijuana's influence on quality of life.
"We've been desensitized by the fact that we have 15,000 liquor stores and 9,000 restaurants that serve liquor [in Los Angeles]," Lahey said.
Though the ordinance would theoretically allow for as many as 186 dispensaries to remain open, some of its provisions threaten to make the actual number far lower. Don Duncan, California Director of Americans for Safe Access, argued that a 1000-foot buffer "may be sort of a de facto law against most of the facilities that would otherwise have qualified," since "it fences off a significant amount of the territory into which dispensaries could locate."
Tarek Tabsh, who owns a dispensary in Venice, said that the city hasn't considered how much of the property that meets location restrictions for dispensaries under the ordinance is actually vacant, meaning the dispensaries that are forced to relocate may have to close simply because they could not obtain a lease on a suitable property. Tabsh and others argue for a "good neighbor variance," which would exempt certain dispensaries from the new location requirements.
"If this ordinance works the way we write it," he said at the meeting on Tuesday, "we won't need those restrictions. Responsible operators should be allowed to stay where they are if they've developed a relationship with their community and if they can prove it to their councilmen, the neighborhood councils and the local law enforcement."
Council member Bill Rosendahl, who represents Tabsh's district, was one of two no-votes. He called the ordinance "insane" and "unworkable," and said that he believes it should be left up to each neighborhood to decide where dispensaries can operate.
"If a neighborhood has a problem with it, it shouldn't exist, but there have to be legitimate petitions from people in the community,' said Roshdahl.
But Council member Richard Alarcon, who represents the 7th district, claims that the effect of the location restrictions are greatly diminished by a provision that would allow collectives to open under the auspices of residential, elderly and licensed care facilities, all of which, he argues, are well-equipped to form patients' collectives and correctly monitor the distribution of medicine.
| Medical Marijuana: California Supreme Court Strikes Down Medical Pot Limits
SAN FRANCISCO — A unanimous California Supreme Court has struck down a law that sought to impose limits on the amount of marijuana a medical...
|

News & Information
The Past, Present, and Future of Medical Marijuana in the United States
On October 19, 2009, the Office of the Deputy US Attorney General issued a memorandum, “Investigations and Prosecutions in States Authorizing the Medical Use of Marijuana.”1 The memo announced a federal policy to abstain from investigating or prosecuting “individuals whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana.” The memo made clear, however, that it did not “legalize marijuana or provide a legal defense to a violation of federal law.” Rather, it was “intended solely as a guide to the exercise of investigative and prosecutorial discretion.” This article seeks to place the attorney general’s action in historical, medical, and legal context.
The Union
A very well built documentary about cannabis and drug prohibition. Does the drug prohibition work? Have a look and think for yourself.
Is Cannabis the Answer to Booze Britain's Problems?
Tuesday, December 1, 2009 - 06:23 in Psychology & Sociology
Substituting cannabis in place of more harmful drugs may be a winning strategy in the fight against substance misuse. Research published in BioMed Central' open access Harm Reduction Journal features a poll of 350 cannabis users, finding that 40% used cannabis to control their alcohol cravings, 66% as a replacement for prescription drugs and 26% for other, more potent, illegal drugs. Amanda Reiman, from the University of California, Berkeley, USA, carried out the study at Berkeley Patient's Group, a medical cannabis dispensary.
Run From the Cure, A Medicinal Marijuana Mov
Film By Christian Laurette - After a serious head injury in 1997, Rick Simpson sought relief from his medical condition through the use of medicinal marijuana. When Rick discovered that the hemp oil (with its high concentration of T.H.C.) cured cancers and other illnesses, he tried to share it with as many people as he could free of charge - curing and controlling literally hundreds of people's illnesses with the use of medicinal marijuana... but when the story went public, the long arm of the law snatched the medicine - leaving potentially thousands of people without their cancer treatments - and leaving Rick with unconstitutional charges of possessing and trafficking marijuana!
Pot Shrinks Tumors; Government Knew in 1974
The term medical marijuana took on dramatic new meaning in February, 2000 when researchers in Madrid announced they had destroyed incurable brain tumors in rats by injecting them with THC, the active ingredient in cannabis.
Medical Cannabis News
- Weed bust not claimed to be medical marijuana grow: Stop the presses
- Medical marijuana issues at the office? Share your stories
- Santa Ana tries to crack down on pot shops
- Is pot place a dispensary or a co-op? Manteca Judge will decide
- Berkeley: Bringing in the Green
- Medical Marijuana regulations move forward in Morro Bay
- Vermont medical marijuana dispensary bill faces action
- Michigan Medical marijuana group meets to form club
- Illegal Orange County marijuana dispensary robbed
- Growth, pot shops on Kalispell agenda
NORML
- Real World Ramifications of Cannabis Legalization and Decriminalization
- Medical Marijuana’s Lost Man: Bryan Epis
- NORML’s Weekly Legislative Update
- Medical marijuana’s not getting any better – the time for RE-legalization is NOW!
- Weeding Through The Hype: Interpreting The Latest Warnings About Pot and Schizophrenia
MPP
- Surge for Marijuana Policy Reform Makes Front Page of USA Today
- Let Pres. Obama Know You Want to End Marijuana Prohibition
- Medical Marijuana POW Needs Your Help
- Insurance Agency Becomes First to Offer National Medical Marijuana Coverage
- DEA Marijuana Seizures Nearly Double As Marijuana Production in Mexico Grows by 35%
Resource Center
A Primer on Medicinal Cannabis
Cannabis (marijuana) is among the most widely used of all psychoactive drugs. There has been renewed interest in the potential medical uses of cannabis (Cannabis sativa) in recent years. Opinion polls suggest similarly strong popular support for the reintroduction of medical cannabis in the USA, the UK, and many European countries. Expert reviews of medical and scientific evidence on this topic carried out on both sides of the Atlantic in the past few years have encouraged further clinical and scientific research.
Read More
A Medicinal Cannabis Horticultural Library
Welcome to the Green Man's Marijuana Growing Guide & Free Library. The spirit is to help medical cannabis patients and horticulturalists grow the most potent marijuana plants legally possible. Growing marijuana indoors in your own space, greenhouse or outdoor garden is not difficult.
Read More
Medical Cannabis Directory Categories
Collectives & Cooperatives (387)
Doctors (113)
Attorneys (78)
Organizations (93)
Industry Services (3)
ID Centers (43)
Coffee Shops (8)
Laguna Woods Seniors Step Towards Embracing Medical Marijuana And Wants To Open A Medical Cannabis Collective
Aug 14, 2009 Debra Baer
KPCC Interview





















