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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Medical Marijuana Collective Opens Federal Way Branch
Title:US WA: Medical Marijuana Collective Opens Federal Way Branch
Published On:2010-12-26
Source:Federal Way Mirror (WA)
Fetched On:2011-03-09 17:54:40
MEDICAL MARIJUANA COLLECTIVE OPENS FEDERAL WAY BRANCH

Owner Welcomes State Taxation

Green Piece Alternative Medicine and Education (GAME) Collective may
be Federal Way's first storefront medical marijuana dispensary.

In a strip mall off South 333rd Street and Pacific Highway South,
most storefronts bear Korean names except for one newbie. A sign on
the plain glass door gives a phone number, hours of operation and a
list of medicated edibles like cookies. Qualified clients can buy
medical-grade cannabis inside the studio-like room, where mirrors
line one wall, legal documents hang on another wall, a TV hums in the
ceiling corner and lounge chairs sit on the floor. On a desk is a
pipe shaped like a Seahawks helmet, with a short length of hose and a
handwritten note granting permission to try it.

Brionne Corbray opened the third branch of his collective Oct. 1 in
Federal Way. The collective, with two branches in Seattle, advertises
openly online and in alternative publications.

In mid-December, the Washington State Department of Revenue announced
plans to collect a sales tax from marijuana dispensaries. Corbray
welcomes a sales tax because he can make more money. In fact, he
would rather be a retail outlet store than a non-profit, he said.

"It's the new gold rush," said Corbray, 46, of Seattle. "We should be
paying taxes. That means they're acknowledging we're legal businesses."

His clientele ranges in age from 19 to 87, he said, and all must have
a verified recommendation from a qualified health care provider to do
business. The collective often donates to low-income or gravely ill
clients, he said.

"Collectives keep the crime rate down -- keeps it off the street," he
said. "I don't think it should be legal like cigarettes."

State laws for possession and gardening offer a defense for medical
marijuana providers, and according to Corbray, there is no shortage
of supplies.

"I make sure I stay within the guidelines of the law," he said.

Corbray went through proper state channels to register, and staff in
Olympia "helped me word it the right way," he said. He is registering
for a nonprofit business license with Federal Way, as required by
city code, he said.

He chose Federal Way to meet demand for marijuana in South King
County and Pierce County. With a local client base of about 100, he
said, the collective is growing every day. So far, he has not been
hassled by the city or law enforcement.

"If they want to find us, they can find us," he said, confident of
King County and Prosecutor Dan Satterberg's established tolerance
toward medical marijuana. "Do I think we're here to stay? Yes."

Upon hearing about GAME Collective's new branch, city council member
Linda Kochmar said medical marijuana dispensaries belong in Holland
or California, not in Federal Way.

"I do know that it helps people with late-stage cancer, and God bless
them, anything they can do to relieve their pain," she said, adding
that marijuana should be a highly-controlled substance, and that a
dispensary makes the drug easier to abuse. "I want my community to be
a healthy, wholesome community that encourages family life. As far as
smoking pot and the ability to get it, I'm going to be very much
against something like that."

Marijuana is illegal under federal law, although 15 states have
medical marijuana laws on the books.

The number of marijuana dispensaries in Washington state is unknown.
Earlier this month, the State Department of Revenue sent letters to
about 90 dispensaries, seeking retail sales taxes on medical
marijuana (GAME Collective did not receive a letter). Dispensaries
are not exempt from sales taxes or the business and occupation (B&O)
tax, the letter said, because state law does not authorize marijuana
as a prescription drug. The letter ends by asking dispensaries to
call the department and register.

According to an AP report, Colorado and some California cities tax
marijuana, with Maine and Washington, D.C., planning to collect taxes
when their dispensary laws take effect. In 2009, Oakland, Calif.,
became the first city to approve the taxing proceeds on medical
marijuana; the mail-in ballot passed with 80 percent voter approval.
One of the measure's key supporters, the owner of a cannabis club in
Oakland, expected to pay more than $350,000 this year, according to a
CNN report. However, Oakland continues to face legal challenges in
its efforts to tax marijuana sales. A proposal for statewide
legalization in California failed at the polls in 2010.

Sensible Washington, a group advocating legalization, recently bought
a billboard ad on Interstate 5 in Fife. The sign reads "Because drug
dealers don't ID. Legalize in 2011." Sensible Washington sponsored a
legalization initiative that failed to gather enough signatures for
the 2010 general election.

Background

In 1998, Washington state voters approved a law that removed criminal
penalties and established a defense for qualified patients who
possess or cultivate cannabis for medicinal use.

In 2008, the "60-day" supply for patients was defined as 24 ounces
and 15 plants; both numbers have attracted intense debate from
medical marijuana advocates. The law allows patients to exceed these
limits if the patient can prove medical need, according to the
Washington State Department of Health.

Federal law classifies marijuana as a Schedule 1 controlled
substance. Washington's medical marijuana laws help patients with a
legal defense in local or state courts. Federal laws do not recognize
the medical use of marijuana.
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