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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Group Pushes Back on Pot Law
Title:US CA: Group Pushes Back on Pot Law
Published On:2010-03-14
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2010-04-02 03:07:18
GROUP PUSHES BACK ON POT LAW

Dispensary Operators Gather Signatures for a Referendum to Block the
City's Ordinance

Seeking to overturn the city's medical marijuana ordinance even
before it takes effect, a loose-knit coalition of Los Angeles
collectives is quietly gathering signatures to force a referendum on the law.

The scrappy, largely volunteer effort faces a Monday deadline to turn
in 27,425 valid signatures.

"We're getting down to the wire here," said Dan Halbert, who runs
Rainforest Collective in Mar Vista and has coordinated the campaign.
"It's going to be close."

Halbert's dispensary on Venice Boulevard, which opened last year, is
one of hundreds that would have to close under the ordinance. That
law, which will probably not be in effect until May, caps the number
at 70. But it also makes an exception to allow about 128 dispensaries
that registered in 2007, when the City Council adopted a moratorium,
to stay open.

"They are just kind of arbitrarily drawing a line in the sand," said
Halbert, who argues that the competitive business environment would
eventually reduce the number on its own, leaving only the best-run collectives.

To City Council members, Halbert is just one of hundreds of
opportunists out to make a quick buck. His store was among those
targeted last summer by a chagrined council after neighborhood
activists repeatedly complained that marijuana outlets were rapidly
opening across the city despite the moratorium.

An entrepreneur who owned an adventure travel business in Phoenix,
Halbert moved to Los Angeles to open his dispensary after three trips
to investigate the city's vibrant weed industry. He said he never
would have started the business if the city had been enforcing its
ban. Now he has become a political activist trying to save his
livelihood and torpedo an ordinance that the City Council has labored
over for almost two years.

"Once you get $100,000 charged on credit cards, you really don't have
any choice," he said. "You have a choice of bankruptcy or trying
every legal avenue that you have to get your rights."

The last time a referendum qualified for the ballot, the City Council
backed down on the targeted ordinance.

In that instance, businesses sought to overturn a law that extended
the city's living wage ordinance to workers at LAX-area hotels.
Rather than face a costly campaign to defend it, the City Council
decided to rescind the law in 2007, negotiate with the hotels and
adopt a compromise.

Halbert said his aim is to persuade the City Council to drop its
ordinance and follow the approach that San Diego has taken,
appointing a broad-based task force to study the issue and make
recommendations.

City Councilman Ed Reyes, who spearheaded the effort to write an
ordinance, said he believes voters would support the law. "If the
voting people in the city interpret their effort as trying to make
this much more relaxed and much more amenable to more dispensaries in
this city, they are not going to go for it," he said. "I think the
majority of people want control. I think the majority of people want
predictability of what's allowed."

Halbert, with allies who include Michael De Marco, president of the
Sunny Day Collective in Chatsworth, has tried to weld the city's
dispensary operators into a political force. But they are an
independent, competitive group, wary of doing anything that might
draw the attention of narcotics officers or city enforcement agents.

"The most startling thing was just how these operators were just so
slow to come to help," said De Marco, who has worked for weeks to
organize the petition drive in his area. "These collective operators,
man, they like to stay in the shadows and not be seen, and I can
really understand that."

Halbert's store, a former blueprint shop that now looks like a scene
from "The Jungle Book," has become an unlikely campaign headquarters.
Volunteers summoned by e-mail showed up last week with their laptop
computers to check signatures against a voter registration database.
They had crossed off many signatures that were either illegible or
could not be matched with the Los Angeles voter registration list.

"There's so many knockout factors," Halbert said. "It's really an
impossible endeavor."

It was tedious work, but Sean McBride, who just started using medical
marijuana last month, was delighted to do it.

"I'm in a weed shop, but I feel like I'm at the Democratic National
Committee," said McBride, a stand-up comedian with a degree in
political science and a role in a local comedy show called "Love
Letters to Mary Jane."

Pamela Richardson also came to volunteer, traveling to her
neighborhood pot shop by wheelchair. The former soldier, wearing a
camouflage cap and shorts, lost her right leg below the knee in Iraq.

"I needed a place of convenience and this is pretty much the closest
place to me, and they do treat you pretty well," she said. "A hundred
facilities in L.A. just won't work. If you've got a thousand
facilities in L.A., somebody's keeping them open."

Halbert, who had just 20 days to print the petition and circulate it
after the City Clerk approved it, said he would put the effort's
chances at about 50-50.

"It's not been easy. It's taken us a while," he said. "We've been
doing this for three or four months now, and finally everybody's
starting to get together."

As the deadline looms, Halbert has ratcheted up the campaign. He is
now paying some signature-gatherers. And he has urged collectives to
close Sunday and send their supporters into the streets.

"We're going to black out the lights," he said, "and get out there
and do our final push."
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