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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Pot Shops Could Still Take Cash, L.A. Says
Title:US CA: Pot Shops Could Still Take Cash, L.A. Says
Published On:2009-11-25
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2009-12-02 12:22:50
POT SHOPS COULD STILL TAKE CASH, L.A. SAYS

Council Members Also Signal That They May Cap Dispensaries at Between
70 and 200.

Dispensaries in Los Angeles could continue to accept cash for medical
marijuana under a provision approved by the City Council on Tuesday,
after it adopted language carefully crafted to maneuver past the city
attorney's adamant position that state law bars the sale of the drug.

Plowing through more than 50 proposed changes to its draft medical
marijuana ordinance, the council also signaled that it would probably
cap the total number of dispensaries at between 70 and 200. The
council asked city officials to return next Wednesday with studies on
caps and on restrictions that would keep dispensaries either 500 feet
or 1,000 feet from places such as schools and parks. The council also
added new restrictions on dispensaries and rejected efforts to loosen
requirements.

By the close of the daylong session, the council had made substantial
headway on an issue that has bedeviled it for years.

With a judge's recent ruling that the city's moratorium on
dispensaries was invalid, the city has almost no control over the
hundreds that have opened.

The council, which avoided the word "sales" on the advice of its
lawyers, decided that Los Angeles would allow "cash contributions,
reimbursements and compensations" as long as they comply with state law.

Council President Eric Garcetti stepped in to negotiate the provision
after an extended discussion. "We have some very elegant and flexible
language that will adjust as state law is defined," he said.

City Atty. Carmen Trutanich and Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Steve
Cooley had urged the council to explicitly ban the sale of marijuana.

William Carter, the chief deputy city attorney, said his office was
following state law and recent court decisions, which led to the
conclusion that collectives could only cultivate marijuana, not sell
it. "Until they change the law, what we're stuck with is this
collective model, not the drive-through Starbucks model," he said.

Several members harshly criticized the city attorney's office.
Councilman Ed Reyes, who oversaw the effort to write an ordinance,
accused the office of pressing "a political point of view that has
nothing to do with objective advice," while Councilman Paul Koretz,
who helped write the state law as an assemblyman, said: "I think
we're getting advice from one direction."

Council members expressed a clear interest in caps, most likely
distributed among the city's 21 police divisions.

The council, though, remains unsure whether to give preference to the
186 dispensaries that registered with the city when the moratorium
was adopted in 2007. Councilman Richard Alarcon said he saw nothing
"magic" in the number, while Councilwoman Janice Hahn said it would
be "fair and reasonable" to favor those who had followed the law.

The council rejected an amendment from Koretz and Reyes that would
have required the police to get a court order to review the records
kept by dispensaries.

Councilman Jose Huizar and several other members objected
vociferously to the proposal, saying that they feared it would
undermine efforts to try to cull bad dispensaries.

The city attorney's office and the Police Department, noting that
other cities have similar requirements, argued that ready access to
the records was essential to determine whether the collectives were
following the law. "An inspection is problematic if you create too
many limits on it," LAPD Cmdr. Pat Gannon said.

The council asked city officials to draft language to ensure that
police have no access to patient medical records. The council also
had a heated discussion about whether to eliminate the ordinance's
requirement that collectives possess no more than five pounds of
marijuana and grow it on-site.

Huizar argued against the change. "We are encouraging a black
market," he said. "This is a dangerous path."

Exasperated, Reyes shot back that the current restriction would not
work. "I'm not advocating for the black market, gangs, cartels to
take advantage of this," he said, "But we can't choke it to the point
where it does not function."

Reyes then withdrew his amendment and asked Huizar to come up with an
alternative.

The council also approved an amendment to limit operators to one
dispensary and an amendment to limit patients and caregivers to
membership in one collective, but allow for emergency purchases.

The restriction on membership drew protests from medical marijuana
advocates. "If you go to your favorite dispensary, and they're out of
what you need, you have to go someplace else," said Dege Coutee, the
head of a patient group.

The council readily adopted a series of amendments, most of them
offered by Koretz and borrowed from West Hollywood, that added more
protections for neighborhoods. Dispensaries would be required to have
unarmed security guards who would patrol a two-block area, to provide
a contact name to police and residents who live within 500 feet, and
to deposit cash once a day.

The council also called on the state attorney general to clear up the
confusion over whether state law allows the sale of marijuana. Atty.
Gen. Jerry Brown issued guidelines on medical marijuana last year,
but several court decisions since then have raised questions about
his conclusion that properly operated nonprofit dispensaries may be legal.

Brown's interpretation came up several times as the city attorney's
office, council members and some speakers cited a local radio
announcer's report that the attorney general had said all sales were
illegal. A spokesman for Brown said the report was inaccurate and
Brown has not changed his position.

The council also tangled over an amendment to put a $100,000 cap on
salaries at dispensaries. It was offered by Alarcon, who said the
dispensary downstairs from his office was making $12,000 a day.

"That's a lot of money," he said. "That's too much money."

The council decided to try to find another way to limit salaries,
such as applying standards set by United Way.
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