Alex Weber - Thu, July 22,
2010 at 4:45 PM
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/LegalizationNation/archives/2010/07/22/will-richmond-close-its-pot-clubs-before-its-new-law-goes-into-effectA
new ordinance passed by the
Richmond City Council this week that
legalizes
the sale of
medical
marijuana may be in direct conflict
with previously issued
injunctions against the city's eight
dispensaries. And it's creating an awkward legal limbo-state for
Richmond's
pot club employees and managers, as well as calling into
question
continued access for customers.
After a second reading of the
ordinance at
next Tuesday's
Council
meeting, it'll take at least thirty days for the ordinance
to legally
take effect. That means the injunctions remain in place
until then,
and they could conceivably force all of Richmond's
current
dispensaries out of business between now and whenever the
new law
goes into full effect. If that were to happen, then medical
pot
patients in Richmond would have to travel to Berkeley or Oakland
to
buy cannabis.
Richmond City prosecutor Trisha Aljoe said
she plans to move forward
with the injunctions against the existing
dispensaries in her city.
"At this point, all of the dispensaries
are still operating in
violation of current law," Aljoe said, citing
the
fact that according
to city
zoning law, pot clubs are out of bounds -
not explicitly, but
by default - and the fact that many of the
dispensary operators were
less than straightforward on their permit
applications.
"A
marijuana
dispensary is not a legal use in this city," Aljoe said,
referring
to Richmond law prior to the council's vote
Tuesday night.
"Plus, they're operating
without the proper license. The new
ordinance won't even be
implemented until there's some sort of
infrastructure [to issue
permits] in place. Until then, you can't
operate in violation of the
law. Besides, it still has to pass the
second reading."
In
its current draft form, the ordinance allows for an unlimited
number
of medical pot collectives licensed by the city manager (or
his
designee) and permitted in any commercial district without
"buffer"
requirements, meaning that various dispensaries may be
located close
to one another, according to the original ordinance's
author and
Richmond City Attorney's office staffer, Mary Renfro.
Councilman
Tom Butt called it "the most liberal and wide-open pot
ordinance in
the state of California - maybe the whole country."
The biggest
restriction in the ordinance might be a requirement
calling for a
public hearing prior to the issuing of any further
permits, with
notice given to property owners and occupants within a
750-foot
radius of any dispensary's intended location.
"We're doing
everything we can to allow public input," Renfro said.
On Tuesday night, the Richmond City Council
had a heated,
three-and-a-half-hour discussion on what to do about
its eight
under-fire dispensaries, not to mention future
medical-marijuana
business interests in the city. After a uniformly
positive public
comment session in support of local clubs - and
despite some grouchy
hectoring of dispensary supporters by Butt - Richmond's council
passed
the amended ordinance shortly before midnight.
Jay Newell, a
partner from one of Richmond's dispensaries, Marina Bay
Parkway's
Golden State Health Center, said he was pleased with the
council's
4-3 vote to get the new ordinance in place. However, he
said he
still fears that his livelihood - and the health of his
customers -
is in jeopardy.
"It's better than what we had before," he said.
"But they didn't come
out and say they'd stop the lawsuits. I
applaud their willingness to
do something, but I don't think
patients should suffer because
city
management doesn't follow the
instructions of City Council. "
There is also a citywide
moratorium on any further dispensaries that
ends in January.
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/LegalizationNation/archives/2010/07/22/will-richmond-close-its-pot-clubs-before-its-new-law-goes-into-effect
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