Medical Marijuana Backers Wary As ID Cards Readied

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Even as San Bernardino County prepares to comply with state law and issue identification cards to medical marijuana patients in August, advocates say access to cannabis may remain difficult.

The same day the Board of Supervisors approved the ID card program, the board also voted to enact a moratorium on the opening of dispensaries -- to allow time for county planners to draft land-use and permitting rules for the facilities.

It's not yet clear what kind of restrictions the county will place on dispensaries or collectives. While the county's rules will apply only to unincorporated areas, many cities in both San Bernardino and Riverside counties already have banned dispensaries or enacted moratoriums.

Riverside County has banned them in unincorporated areas, though it does issue identification cards to patients whose physicians have prescribed marijuana to ease various symptoms, including pain and nausea.

San Bernardino County fought the state's medical marijuana law for more than three years on the grounds that it conflicted with federal law. The county lost the legal battle in May and now must issue the identification cards.

With so many bans and moratoriums in place, there are only a few Inland locations where patients can buy marijuana. Dispensaries can be found in Palm Springs in Riverside County and the city of Yucca Valley in San Bernardino County.

"Most of these towns have banned them outright," said Scott Bledsoe, a Crestline resident who sued San Bernardino County over its refusal to implement the state medical marijuana card program. "That's an uphill fight for us."

Desert Dispensary

While dispensaries in other counties can be free-wheeling places where patients choose their pot from jars with colorful names, the Yucca Valley dispensary looks more like a pharmacy.

The California Alternative Medical Solutions office sits in a remote Yucca Valley industrial park surrounded by swaths of Joshua trees and a public works yard. It has been operating nearly a year.

Co-owner D.J. Ross and the group's board of directors examined dispensary ordinances across the state and decided to give their operation a clinical look. Employees in scrubs dole out medicinal doses of cannabis in prescription bottles with labels, all weighed on certified and inspected scales.

"People get this idea that it's a black market drug and a shady operation," said Ross, who regularly invites people to tour his operation.

Patients enter a small foyer and present their ID cards and prescriptions to personnel behind a glass window. They also can purchase herbal remedies or schedule appointments for massages, chiropractic adjustments and other alternative medicine therapies.

But Ross said he is concerned about an ordinance drafted by the Yucca Valley Planning Commission that would ban outlets like his.

Ross said concerns generally focus on the dispensary's proximity to children attending classes at the adjacent Desert Ballet Centre and Yucca Valley Karate businesses.

Planning commissioners say the dispensary in nearby Palm Springs should be sufficient for local patients.

Ross argues that the dispensary presents no danger to children and that there have been no nearby crimes. He invites parents and grandparents to visit.

"I welcome them," Ross said. "I tell them, 'Please come in and see what we're all about.'"

San Bernardino County may have a second dispensary if Carl Clines, owner of California Alternative Caregivers in Venice, gains approval.

Clines, who opened the first legal dispensary in Los Angeles four years ago, has approached county planners and sheriff's officials about opening one at Big Bear Lake.

He has invited them to visit his Venice dispensary, which he says operates under very strict rules.

Concern Over Rules

Advocates fear that San Bernardino County's ordinance governing dispensaries will consign them to out-of-the-way industrial areas next to strip clubs instead of allowing them in a commercial district alongside pharmacies or tobacco shops. Bledsoe said he believes they can operate discretely in such areas.

He is frustrated by the contradiction of governments issuing identification cards to patients while banning the dispensaries that provide the marijuana.

"It does no good to have cards if you can't possess it legally," he said.

Most Inland patients get their marijuana in Orange or Los Angeles counties.

FEW ALTERNATIVES

For patients with cancer or AIDS who can't drive, that's not an easy alternative, Bledsoe said.

"Most people get their marijuana the old-fashioned way: from black market criminals," said Lanny Swerdlow, medical director at the THCF Medical Clinic and Patient Center in Riverside.

The clinic provides assistance to medical marijuana patients but does not provide marijuana.

San Bernardino County spokeswoman Lynn Fischer said patients can grow a small amount of marijuana for personal use. But they still must find a source of plants or seeds.

The county expects to begin its ID card program in mid-August, after the supervisors formally adopt the ordinance on July 14.


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA)
Copyright: 2009 The Press-Enterprise Company
Contact: Opinion | PE.com | Southern California News | News for Inland Southern California
Website: PE.com | Southern California News | News for Inland Southern California
Authors: Imran Ghori, Michael Perrault
 
If only we could sue for our rights being trampled at all turns. Do these supposedly broke institutions have an endless supply of money to fight us?
 
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