News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Desert Hot Springs Council Votes To Ban Pot Dispensaries |
Title: | US CA: Desert Hot Springs Council Votes To Ban Pot Dispensaries |
Published On: | 2008-12-17 |
Source: | Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-12-17 16:59:14 |
DESERT HOT SPRINGS COUNCIL VOTES TO BAN POT DISPENSARIES
Desert Hot Springs on Tuesday joined four other Coachella Valley
cities in voting to ban medical marijuana dispensaries.
The City Council voted 4-1 to ban the dispensaries, with Councilman
Karl Baker dissenting. The city's moratorium expires in February, and
the ban will take effect 30 days after a second reading in January,
City Attorney Ruben Duran said.
Several on the council said they worried a medical marijuana
cooperative or collective would strain an understaffed city police
department that has its hands full with crime.
"We're right now in reactive mode with our police department," Mayor
Yvonne Parks said before the vote. "We have not gotten to the point
where we can be proactive."
Baker took a different view. "We've heard all these stories how this
is going to be a drain on police department" but none are supported
by fact, he said. Baker also criticized Duran for the staff report
recommending the ban.
"I am very, very disturbed ... that someone with a legal background
presents something that is so heavily weighted one way," he said.
Lanny Swerdlow, president of the Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project,
implored the council not to pass the ban. No one spoke in favor Tuesday.
Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta and Palm Desert have banned
dispensaries. Riverside County also has a ban in force for
unincorporated areas.
Palm Springs passed a moratorium on dispensaries in March 2006 but
allowed it to expire earlier this year. Coachella has an active moratorium.
Later in the meeting, a 4-1 vote kept Gabriel King on the Planning
Commission. Baker and Councilman Al Schmidt proposed the discussion
after comments King made at last week's commission meeting on a
proposed Art in Public Places program.
"The Building Industry Association has the right" to lobby for a
cheaper arts program, King said Dec. 9, but local citizens "don't
have the tool of paid lobbyists or the promise of future campaign
contributions to affect the vote."
Schmidt, Baker and Parks said the comments crossed the line and
implied council members were "on the take," as Baker put it.
King did not attend the meeting. Baker said he would not vote to oust
King and called Tuesday's discussion a warning.
Desert Hot Springs on Tuesday joined four other Coachella Valley
cities in voting to ban medical marijuana dispensaries.
The City Council voted 4-1 to ban the dispensaries, with Councilman
Karl Baker dissenting. The city's moratorium expires in February, and
the ban will take effect 30 days after a second reading in January,
City Attorney Ruben Duran said.
Several on the council said they worried a medical marijuana
cooperative or collective would strain an understaffed city police
department that has its hands full with crime.
"We're right now in reactive mode with our police department," Mayor
Yvonne Parks said before the vote. "We have not gotten to the point
where we can be proactive."
Baker took a different view. "We've heard all these stories how this
is going to be a drain on police department" but none are supported
by fact, he said. Baker also criticized Duran for the staff report
recommending the ban.
"I am very, very disturbed ... that someone with a legal background
presents something that is so heavily weighted one way," he said.
Lanny Swerdlow, president of the Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project,
implored the council not to pass the ban. No one spoke in favor Tuesday.
Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta and Palm Desert have banned
dispensaries. Riverside County also has a ban in force for
unincorporated areas.
Palm Springs passed a moratorium on dispensaries in March 2006 but
allowed it to expire earlier this year. Coachella has an active moratorium.
Later in the meeting, a 4-1 vote kept Gabriel King on the Planning
Commission. Baker and Councilman Al Schmidt proposed the discussion
after comments King made at last week's commission meeting on a
proposed Art in Public Places program.
"The Building Industry Association has the right" to lobby for a
cheaper arts program, King said Dec. 9, but local citizens "don't
have the tool of paid lobbyists or the promise of future campaign
contributions to affect the vote."
Schmidt, Baker and Parks said the comments crossed the line and
implied council members were "on the take," as Baker put it.
King did not attend the meeting. Baker said he would not vote to oust
King and called Tuesday's discussion a warning.
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