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420 Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,615
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The ongoing debate over the legality of medical marijuana
dispensaries rolled into the Public Safety Committee of the Coachella Valley Association of Governments on Monday with city representatives seeking some clarity on the issue. Coachella Mayor Pro Tem Juan De Lara said cities want a consistent policy for the valley. "If we do ban (dispensaries), under what authority? If we're allowing them, what regulations to ensure strict controls?" De Lara said in an interview after the meeting. Kevin Ruddy, Riverside County chief deputy district attorney, answered questions about a legal opinion opposing dispensaries that his boss, county District Attorney Grover Trask, issued last month. Holding that federal prohibitions on marijuana trump state laws allowing medical use, the opinion was a key factor in the county Board of Supervisors' vote Oct. 3 to ban dispensaries in unincorporated areas such as Bermuda Dunes and Sky Valley. That ban is reverberating with cities considering their own ordinances, from Palm Springs, which has two dispensaries, to Coachella, which De Lara said is researching the issue but has yet to draft a law. Indian Wells passed a moratorium on dispensaries late last year, and Mayor Pro Tem Conrad Negron asked Ruddy about the conflict between federal and state law. In a phone interview later, Negron said: "I feel these marijuana dispensaries are nothing but commercializing marijuana. There's a lot of money involved in this." Undeterred by the legal limbo, Palm Desert recently renewed the business license for CannaHelp, a dispensary that has operated on El Paseo for a year. Ruddy said whether a dispensary is in an incorporated or unincorporated town is immaterial. "We're all subject to state law," he said. "Nowhere in the law does code allow for what is called a dispensary. That's the bottom line." Lanny Swerdlow, president of the Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project, a patients advocacy group, called Ruddy's statements inaccurate. Dispensaries are covered by provisions in state law that allow people to "administer marijuana to medical marijuana patients," he said. CannaHelp has enrolled about 1,200 qualified patients in the past year, owner Stacy Hochanadel said in a phone interview Monday. It is licensed as a medical supply company, he said. Palm Desert Councilman Robert A. Spiegel, who is also chairman of the CVAG Public Safety Committee, said he sees the conflict between state and federal law as a conundrum. But he said, "Without a city law, (CannaHelp) will continue like any other business unless it breaks the law." Newshawk: Soliff Twister www.420times.com Pubdate: Wed, 18 Oct 2006 Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) Webpage: http://www.thedesertsun.com/apps/pbc...DATE/310160007 Copyright: 2006 The Desert Sun Contact: http://www.thedesertsun.com/opinion/...ubmitter.shtml Author: K Kaufmann Website: http://www.thedesertsun.com/ |
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