News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: The Great Duopoly Debate |
Title: | US CA: The Great Duopoly Debate |
Published On: | 2011-04-07 |
Source: | Chico News & Review, the (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2011-04-08 06:01:39 |
the Great Duopoly Debate
Local Politicians and Medical-Marijuana Proponents Weigh
Two-Dispensary Limit
Picture This: Thousands of Medical-Marijuana Patients in and Around
Chico, With Only Two Dispensaries From Which to Get Their Medicine.
That's The Way Things Are Looking, Based on What the City Council
Requested Be Added to the City's Draft Ordinance Regulating
Dispensaries Within City Limits.
"I Think It's The Most Ridiculous Thing in the World," Said Rick
Tognoli, WHO Runs Scripts Only Service (SOS), a Dispensary in An
Unincorporated Area Near Chico. "The Free Market Should Decide."
What Makes This Subject So Interesting Is That Tognoli's
Viewpoint--Which Many Others in the Community Share--Is Exactly What
City Staff Recommended to the Council at Its Last Meeting on The
Subject March 3. the Land-Use Restrictions in the Ordinance, As It Was
Proposed, Would Limit the Number of Dispensaries to 10 or Fewer, Staff
Explained. Nevertheless, the Council Voted to Allow Just Two
Dispensaries, Which Sent the Ordinance Back to City Staff to Revise.
"We Had Recommended an Ordinance That Would Limit the Dispensaries To
Three Zoning Districts in Town," Explained Planning Services Director
Mark Wolfe in a Recent Phone Interview. "We Had Done Some Analysis Of
What That Might Mean As Far As the Limitation on the Number [Of
Dispensaries]. the Probable Maximum Was Around Eight."
Citizen Collective, Which Has Been Working With the City to Create An
Ordinance, Has Been Waiting for Laws to Be Put in Place Before Opening
Its Doors. Lobbyist M. Max Del Real, WHO Represents the Dispensary,
Said He's Very Much in Support of Limiting the Number of Such Entities
in Chico. in Fact, Members of the Citizen Collective Board Were Among
the First to Publicly Discuss Restricting the Number Of
Dispensaries.
"The City Needs to Go Slow. It Can't Just Create Open, Porous
Corridors--Then It Will Become Another L.A., and L.A. Sucks in Regard
to This Issue," Del Real Said. He Pointed to Cities Like Oakland And
Stockton, Where the Number Is Limited.
Others, Like Tognoli and Robert Galia, WHO Runs North Valley Holistic
Health--One of the Few Dispensaries Still Open in Butte County Since
Last Summer's Raids--Find the Limitation to Be Counterintuitive And,
Overall, Bad for Patients.
"Two Is Not Enough. We're Getting 25 to 30 New Patients a Day--That's
a Lot," Said Galia. "Where Are They Going to Go? They Can't All Go To
Two Places."
North Valley Holistic Health, Like the Seven Other Dispensaries That
Were Raided Last June, Has Been Fighting an Uphill Battle to Stay Open
for Patients. Several Shut Down in the Months Following The
Raid--Though No Charges Have Been Filed. Tognoli Recently Closed SOS,
Which Now Takes Appointments Only. Doctor's Orders, Headquartered In
Sacramento, Just Shut Its Doors in Chico As Well. Nvhh Has Started A
Petition Drive to Help It Gain One of the Two Spots in the City, So It
Can Operate Without the Fear of Code-Enforcement Fines.
SOS, However, Doesn't Want to Play the City's Games and Is Solely
Pushing for No Numerical Limitation on Dispensaries in Chico.
"The Free Market Should Decide," Tognoli Said. "We Were Able To
Support Eight Before; We Should Be Able to Support Eight Again."
So, What Would Creating a Limitation of Two Dispensaries Mean? For
One, It Would Require a Subjective Review Process Be Set Up to Decide
Which Two Operators Would Get Permits.
"My Sense Is There Is Some Demand Out There for These Permits and It's
Going to Be a Lot of Work Reviewing Them," Said Wolfe, Adding That
He's Been Approached by About 10 Different Individuals or Groups Over
the Past Few Years WHO Want to Open Up Shop in Chico. "Permits Would
Have Been Issued Over the Counter If the Applicants Met Certain
Criteria. by Limiting It to Two, Now We Have to Go About Deciding
Which Two Are Going to Get This."
Councilman Andy Holcombe Sees Several Problems With Imposing a Limit
on Dispensaries, Including the Process of Subjectively Deciding Which
Dispensaries Get Permits.
"It's Incumbent Upon the City to Come Up With a System to Evaluate And
Judge Which Are Best," He Said. "It's A Very Slippery Slope As Far As
Ensuring It's Fair and Supportable Against Court Challenge, and It
Opens US Up to Potential Problems That Are Best Avoided at the Outset."
Councilwoman Mary Flynn, However, WHO Made the Motion to Vote For
Imposing a Limit on the Number of Dispensaries, Said She's Committed
to That Plan.
"Given That We're Venturing into Uncharted Waters, It Makes Sense For
US to Limit the Number of Dispensaries," She Said. "As We Learn About
What's Involved, and the Impacts on the Community, Then We Can Revisit
It."
Del Real Believes Setting a Limit and Then Choosing the Best Two Of
the Bunch of Applicants Would Be Good for Chico, and Clearly The
Majority of the City Council Agreed With Him.
"In Government, You Have to Have Certain Regulations to Prevent
Excess." Del Real Added. "I'd Be Happy With One If My Client Got That
Permit, but We Tried to Do What Was Best for Everybody."
Flynn and Del Real Both Argued That Having a Limited Number Of
Dispensaries Would Have No Impact on Their Ability to Fulfill The
Needs of the Community. but Others, Like Tognoli, Galia and Holcombe,
Believe the More Access, the Better.
"Any Time You Have a Monopoly--Two Is Just About the Same As One--The
Quality of Service Drops," Galia Said. "When You're The Only Game In
Town, You Don't Have to Worry About Keeping Prices Down and Doing A
Good Job for Your Patients."
Tognoli Added That a Majority of Patients He Sees Are on Disability,
and They Not Only Need Low Prices, but Also Physical Access That Just
Two Locations May Not Adequately Provide.
"It's Not a Monopoly--It's A Guarantee You're Going to Have a Good
Person Following the Law," Del Real Countered. "Otherwise, You're
Welcoming Bad Players."
but Limiting the Number of Dispensaries, While It Might Work in Other
Cities, May Not Be Best for Chico, Holcombe Said.
"What Ever Happened to 'Let the Free Market Decide'?" Holcombe
Asked. "Any Council Action to Arbitrarily Limit the Number Of
Medical-Marijuana Dispensaries Beyond the Limitations in the Ordinance
Itself Is Poor Planning and Policy and Is Bad for the City. I'm Not
That Concerned About What Other Cities Are Doing--I Want to Do What's
Best for Chico."
Local Politicians and Medical-Marijuana Proponents Weigh
Two-Dispensary Limit
Picture This: Thousands of Medical-Marijuana Patients in and Around
Chico, With Only Two Dispensaries From Which to Get Their Medicine.
That's The Way Things Are Looking, Based on What the City Council
Requested Be Added to the City's Draft Ordinance Regulating
Dispensaries Within City Limits.
"I Think It's The Most Ridiculous Thing in the World," Said Rick
Tognoli, WHO Runs Scripts Only Service (SOS), a Dispensary in An
Unincorporated Area Near Chico. "The Free Market Should Decide."
What Makes This Subject So Interesting Is That Tognoli's
Viewpoint--Which Many Others in the Community Share--Is Exactly What
City Staff Recommended to the Council at Its Last Meeting on The
Subject March 3. the Land-Use Restrictions in the Ordinance, As It Was
Proposed, Would Limit the Number of Dispensaries to 10 or Fewer, Staff
Explained. Nevertheless, the Council Voted to Allow Just Two
Dispensaries, Which Sent the Ordinance Back to City Staff to Revise.
"We Had Recommended an Ordinance That Would Limit the Dispensaries To
Three Zoning Districts in Town," Explained Planning Services Director
Mark Wolfe in a Recent Phone Interview. "We Had Done Some Analysis Of
What That Might Mean As Far As the Limitation on the Number [Of
Dispensaries]. the Probable Maximum Was Around Eight."
Citizen Collective, Which Has Been Working With the City to Create An
Ordinance, Has Been Waiting for Laws to Be Put in Place Before Opening
Its Doors. Lobbyist M. Max Del Real, WHO Represents the Dispensary,
Said He's Very Much in Support of Limiting the Number of Such Entities
in Chico. in Fact, Members of the Citizen Collective Board Were Among
the First to Publicly Discuss Restricting the Number Of
Dispensaries.
"The City Needs to Go Slow. It Can't Just Create Open, Porous
Corridors--Then It Will Become Another L.A., and L.A. Sucks in Regard
to This Issue," Del Real Said. He Pointed to Cities Like Oakland And
Stockton, Where the Number Is Limited.
Others, Like Tognoli and Robert Galia, WHO Runs North Valley Holistic
Health--One of the Few Dispensaries Still Open in Butte County Since
Last Summer's Raids--Find the Limitation to Be Counterintuitive And,
Overall, Bad for Patients.
"Two Is Not Enough. We're Getting 25 to 30 New Patients a Day--That's
a Lot," Said Galia. "Where Are They Going to Go? They Can't All Go To
Two Places."
North Valley Holistic Health, Like the Seven Other Dispensaries That
Were Raided Last June, Has Been Fighting an Uphill Battle to Stay Open
for Patients. Several Shut Down in the Months Following The
Raid--Though No Charges Have Been Filed. Tognoli Recently Closed SOS,
Which Now Takes Appointments Only. Doctor's Orders, Headquartered In
Sacramento, Just Shut Its Doors in Chico As Well. Nvhh Has Started A
Petition Drive to Help It Gain One of the Two Spots in the City, So It
Can Operate Without the Fear of Code-Enforcement Fines.
SOS, However, Doesn't Want to Play the City's Games and Is Solely
Pushing for No Numerical Limitation on Dispensaries in Chico.
"The Free Market Should Decide," Tognoli Said. "We Were Able To
Support Eight Before; We Should Be Able to Support Eight Again."
So, What Would Creating a Limitation of Two Dispensaries Mean? For
One, It Would Require a Subjective Review Process Be Set Up to Decide
Which Two Operators Would Get Permits.
"My Sense Is There Is Some Demand Out There for These Permits and It's
Going to Be a Lot of Work Reviewing Them," Said Wolfe, Adding That
He's Been Approached by About 10 Different Individuals or Groups Over
the Past Few Years WHO Want to Open Up Shop in Chico. "Permits Would
Have Been Issued Over the Counter If the Applicants Met Certain
Criteria. by Limiting It to Two, Now We Have to Go About Deciding
Which Two Are Going to Get This."
Councilman Andy Holcombe Sees Several Problems With Imposing a Limit
on Dispensaries, Including the Process of Subjectively Deciding Which
Dispensaries Get Permits.
"It's Incumbent Upon the City to Come Up With a System to Evaluate And
Judge Which Are Best," He Said. "It's A Very Slippery Slope As Far As
Ensuring It's Fair and Supportable Against Court Challenge, and It
Opens US Up to Potential Problems That Are Best Avoided at the Outset."
Councilwoman Mary Flynn, However, WHO Made the Motion to Vote For
Imposing a Limit on the Number of Dispensaries, Said She's Committed
to That Plan.
"Given That We're Venturing into Uncharted Waters, It Makes Sense For
US to Limit the Number of Dispensaries," She Said. "As We Learn About
What's Involved, and the Impacts on the Community, Then We Can Revisit
It."
Del Real Believes Setting a Limit and Then Choosing the Best Two Of
the Bunch of Applicants Would Be Good for Chico, and Clearly The
Majority of the City Council Agreed With Him.
"In Government, You Have to Have Certain Regulations to Prevent
Excess." Del Real Added. "I'd Be Happy With One If My Client Got That
Permit, but We Tried to Do What Was Best for Everybody."
Flynn and Del Real Both Argued That Having a Limited Number Of
Dispensaries Would Have No Impact on Their Ability to Fulfill The
Needs of the Community. but Others, Like Tognoli, Galia and Holcombe,
Believe the More Access, the Better.
"Any Time You Have a Monopoly--Two Is Just About the Same As One--The
Quality of Service Drops," Galia Said. "When You're The Only Game In
Town, You Don't Have to Worry About Keeping Prices Down and Doing A
Good Job for Your Patients."
Tognoli Added That a Majority of Patients He Sees Are on Disability,
and They Not Only Need Low Prices, but Also Physical Access That Just
Two Locations May Not Adequately Provide.
"It's Not a Monopoly--It's A Guarantee You're Going to Have a Good
Person Following the Law," Del Real Countered. "Otherwise, You're
Welcoming Bad Players."
but Limiting the Number of Dispensaries, While It Might Work in Other
Cities, May Not Be Best for Chico, Holcombe Said.
"What Ever Happened to 'Let the Free Market Decide'?" Holcombe
Asked. "Any Council Action to Arbitrarily Limit the Number Of
Medical-Marijuana Dispensaries Beyond the Limitations in the Ordinance
Itself Is Poor Planning and Policy and Is Bad for the City. I'm Not
That Concerned About What Other Cities Are Doing--I Want to Do What's
Best for Chico."
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