News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: 6-Month Moratorium On Tacoma Medical Marijuana Shops |
Title: | US WA: 6-Month Moratorium On Tacoma Medical Marijuana Shops |
Published On: | 2011-08-03 |
Source: | Bellingham Herald (WA) |
Fetched On: | 2011-08-04 06:01:32 |
6-MONTH MORATORIUM ON TACOMA MEDICAL MARIJUANA SHOPS OK'D
Tacoma banned medical marijuana shops Tuesday - but city government
promises not to shut down existing businesses and has no plans for how
to get rid of any new ones.
The temporary ban is far from the last word. Mayor Marilyn Strickland
said the six-month moratorium she proposed and the City Council
unanimously approved is just a prelude to future regulation that she
hopes will license legitimate sellers and allow them to operate.
The ban applies to old and new medical marijuana providers but
probably won't have much effect on the dozens of existing shops in
Tacoma. That's because city lawyers contend they're already against
the law, and are going through the legal process of trying to shut
them down -- while allowing them to remain open as their appeals
proceed and the council thinks about how to regulate them. Those who
might have to worry are new operators not already embroiled in legal
appeals with the city, or people who are thinking about opening such a
business.
"If you do, we're going to shut you down," Strickland
said.
A shutdown might start with sending a letter, but it's not clear what
happens after that. Would police raid the place? Interim City Manager
Rey Arellano said he and his staff hasn't yet decided on a strategy.
The moratorium leaves it to Arellano to enforce the law -- "in a
manner that will continue to preserve legal access to medical cannabis
for qualifying patients."
That means, in effect, the city won't take any new enforcement action
against existing businesses, city staffers and council members said.
The moratorium will prevent shops from multiplying further while rules
are set up, Strickland said. Now the city will create a task force to
come up with regulations, she said.
Meantime, the city Planning Commission is tasked with proposing zoning
rules with an eye toward the locations of schools, day cares, parks,
churches and other facilities.
Tacoma's ban, following the lead of places such as Kent and Federal
Way, applies to both dispensaries and collective gardens allowed under
a new state law. The gardens are forbidden whether or not they are
connected to a business.
The moratorium takes effect immediately as an emergency measure after
the council's 7-0 vote, with Spiro Manthou and David Boe absent. It
now goes to an Aug. 17 Planning Commission review and Sept. 7 and
Sept. 27 public hearings.
Medical marijuana advocates complained the public's first chance to
see the moratorium came on the day it was approved, and they worried
it would close down providers.
"If you're going to pass a moratorium," attorney Jay Berneburg told
the council, "please do not close the businesses and ruin the incomes
and jobs of literally a couple hundred people and the safe access to
marijuana of several thousand patients."
The complaints mystified Councilman Joe Lonergan, who said businesses
should be glad they will effectively be grandfathered in.
"Very rarely does the government step in and say 'Those who have a
business open currently are going to face zero competition for the
next six months,'" Lonergan said.
"Celebrate," he advised.
Tacoma banned medical marijuana shops Tuesday - but city government
promises not to shut down existing businesses and has no plans for how
to get rid of any new ones.
The temporary ban is far from the last word. Mayor Marilyn Strickland
said the six-month moratorium she proposed and the City Council
unanimously approved is just a prelude to future regulation that she
hopes will license legitimate sellers and allow them to operate.
The ban applies to old and new medical marijuana providers but
probably won't have much effect on the dozens of existing shops in
Tacoma. That's because city lawyers contend they're already against
the law, and are going through the legal process of trying to shut
them down -- while allowing them to remain open as their appeals
proceed and the council thinks about how to regulate them. Those who
might have to worry are new operators not already embroiled in legal
appeals with the city, or people who are thinking about opening such a
business.
"If you do, we're going to shut you down," Strickland
said.
A shutdown might start with sending a letter, but it's not clear what
happens after that. Would police raid the place? Interim City Manager
Rey Arellano said he and his staff hasn't yet decided on a strategy.
The moratorium leaves it to Arellano to enforce the law -- "in a
manner that will continue to preserve legal access to medical cannabis
for qualifying patients."
That means, in effect, the city won't take any new enforcement action
against existing businesses, city staffers and council members said.
The moratorium will prevent shops from multiplying further while rules
are set up, Strickland said. Now the city will create a task force to
come up with regulations, she said.
Meantime, the city Planning Commission is tasked with proposing zoning
rules with an eye toward the locations of schools, day cares, parks,
churches and other facilities.
Tacoma's ban, following the lead of places such as Kent and Federal
Way, applies to both dispensaries and collective gardens allowed under
a new state law. The gardens are forbidden whether or not they are
connected to a business.
The moratorium takes effect immediately as an emergency measure after
the council's 7-0 vote, with Spiro Manthou and David Boe absent. It
now goes to an Aug. 17 Planning Commission review and Sept. 7 and
Sept. 27 public hearings.
Medical marijuana advocates complained the public's first chance to
see the moratorium came on the day it was approved, and they worried
it would close down providers.
"If you're going to pass a moratorium," attorney Jay Berneburg told
the council, "please do not close the businesses and ruin the incomes
and jobs of literally a couple hundred people and the safe access to
marijuana of several thousand patients."
The complaints mystified Councilman Joe Lonergan, who said businesses
should be glad they will effectively be grandfathered in.
"Very rarely does the government step in and say 'Those who have a
business open currently are going to face zero competition for the
next six months,'" Lonergan said.
"Celebrate," he advised.
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