Medical Marijuana Proponents To Rally In Royal Oak Tonight

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Medical marijuana advocates are planning a demonstration outside Royal Oak City Hall at 6:30 tonight to object to the city's expected ban on medical marijuana, organizer Greg Pawlowski said.

"Royal Oak is going to prevent people from raising any marijuana or even taking their medicine at home," Pawlowski, 37, of Mt. Clemens said. He said he operates a compassion club in Detroit called Patient Caregiver Connection with about 200 members, and that he had contacted all of them as well as members of compassion clubs in Royal Oak, Birmingham, Macomb County and Downriver to ask them to join him tonight outside city hall at 211 E. Williams in downtown Royal Oak.

Last month, the city's seven-member elected City Commission voted 4-3 to pass on first reading a land-use ordinance pushed by Commissioner Chuck Semchena, the former Royal Oak city attorney and a staunch opponent of what he said is the widespread substance abuse and threat to children posed by medical marijuana in Michigan. If the ordinance passed tonight, it would go into effect in 10 days, city officials said. Its effect would be to make medical-marijuana cultivation, distribution and even use by state-approved patients illegal anywhere in the city, Semchena said today.

"There's about 12 other cities that already passed an ordinance like this" to prohibit "all land uses that are illegal under federal law," he said. According to Michigan Townships Association, the following have similar ordinances: Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Canton Township, Howell, Livonia, Madison Heights, Northville, Plymouth, Saline and Westland. Although 72% of Royal Oak voters supported the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act when it passed on a statewide ballot in November 2008, Semchena said, "People voted with compassion in their hearts for medical marijuana," but the state law is untenable and can't enforced.

"Right now, we've got individuals allowed to grow 12 Christmas-tree-sized plants at a time, and you can harvest that four times a year, so there's way too much marijuana available for one caregiver. That number of plants can produce 25,000 marijuana cigarettes per year, with a street value of up to $150,000," according to Royal Oak Police Chief Christoper Jahnke.

"Invariably, this is going to end up in the hands of teenagers," Semchena said.

But Royal Oak Mayor Jim Ellison voted against the proposed ordinance last month.

City Commissioner Jim Rasor, who also opposed the proposal, said today, "This isn't about marijuana anymore. It's about people's right to have their government respect their wishes," as expressed in the 2008 statewide vote to allow medical marijuana.

Rasor said the city, by banning all medical marijuana use through an ordinance that simply says all federal laws are to be enforced, and then specifically banning activities with it in commercial districts, would push use and cultivation into secrecy and into residential homes – "the opposite of what we should be doing."


NewsHawk: MedicalNeed:420 MAGAZINE
Source:freep.com
Author: BILL LAITNER
Contact: Contact us | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
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Website:Medical marijuana proponents to rally in Royal Oak tonight | freep.com | Detroit Free Press
 
My understanding is that the MI law says that no other law may abridge the MI law. So, these podunk city wannabes are trying to regulate beyond their powers. Unfortunately, it's going to take someone with cash and a good lawyer to fight the man.

It is sick that you can have any number of hallucinogens and narcotics in your home to treat pain and other conditions (as long as the big pharma companies and the doctors get paid) but beware of the might MJ plant, it's going to be reefer madness all over the place, lol

The kids who want MJ have had it for years already. It's not hard to get. In fact, as far as I know, it's not hard to get any number of illegal drugs in this state, people just want to be numb from the poor economy, crime, and general malaise.

The economy in MI sucks and the best thing they could do would be to embrace MJ, the small business owner who is educating the home grower, and stimulate the economy (other than those related to law enforcement, the courts and the legal system).

I respect the legal system, but I think that the prosecutorial climate in Oakland County has gone too far. They need to light one up and relax.
 
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