News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: L.A. Medical Pot Law Not Imminent |
Title: | US CA: L.A. Medical Pot Law Not Imminent |
Published On: | 2009-11-04 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2009-11-04 15:20:31 |
L.A. MEDICAL POT LAW NOT IMMINENT
This was to be the week that the Los Angeles City Council, spurred by
a judge's ruling that its moratorium on medical marijuana
dispensaries was invalid, was to take action. But it won't be this
week. Or even next week. And it probably won't be the week after.
Councilman Ed Reyes, who is overseeing the development of an
ordinance on the dispensaries, said Tuesday that he decided it would
not be wise to send the draft to the council without trying to
resolve several complicated and contentious issues.
He said he expects to take up the ordinance again at the committee
level, most likely in the third week of November. Some council
members, including Reyes, will be at a national conference next week.
"I want to get it out on the council floor as soon as possible," Reyes said.
The council has been working on a draft ordinance for more than two
years. Hundreds of dispensaries, by some estimates as many as 1,000,
have opened because the city failed to enforce its ban.
Last month, a Superior Court judge declared that the moratorium had
been illegally extended. That led council members to pledge quick action.
But the council is still wrestling with how to ensure that marijuana
is not sold for profit, whether to require dispensaries to provide
names of patients and growers, and how far the stores should be kept
from schools and other places where children congregate.
This was to be the week that the Los Angeles City Council, spurred by
a judge's ruling that its moratorium on medical marijuana
dispensaries was invalid, was to take action. But it won't be this
week. Or even next week. And it probably won't be the week after.
Councilman Ed Reyes, who is overseeing the development of an
ordinance on the dispensaries, said Tuesday that he decided it would
not be wise to send the draft to the council without trying to
resolve several complicated and contentious issues.
He said he expects to take up the ordinance again at the committee
level, most likely in the third week of November. Some council
members, including Reyes, will be at a national conference next week.
"I want to get it out on the council floor as soon as possible," Reyes said.
The council has been working on a draft ordinance for more than two
years. Hundreds of dispensaries, by some estimates as many as 1,000,
have opened because the city failed to enforce its ban.
Last month, a Superior Court judge declared that the moratorium had
been illegally extended. That led council members to pledge quick action.
But the council is still wrestling with how to ensure that marijuana
is not sold for profit, whether to require dispensaries to provide
names of patients and growers, and how far the stores should be kept
from schools and other places where children congregate.
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