San Mateo County's only medical marijuana dispensary denied business license

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REDWOOD CITY – The only known medical-marijuana dispensary operating in San Mateo County was denied a business license Monday, a decision that could lead the Coastside collective to shut down.

The San Mateo County License Board voted 3-0 not to give a permit to the Blue Heaven Collective, which opened last summer before a county ordinance regulating pot clubs took effect. Blue Heaven was still obligated to go through the licensing process, but it stayed open while its application was pending.

The operator of the collective, Rubin Muniz, said after the hearing that he plans to appeal the denial to the board of supervisors.

If Muniz loses his fight to stay open, his club will meet the same end as a string of other dispensaries in the county that have popped up since voters legalized medical marijuana in 1996 with Proposition 215.

Some were shut down in the wake of a 2007 San Mateo police and Drug Enforcement Agency raid, including one formerly run by Muniz. Others have closed because they were within 1,000 feet of a school or community center, which violates the county ordinance.

Several Peninsula cities, including Redwood City and South San Francisco, have set up temporary bans on pot clubs while they research the topic.

Blue Heaven is the first to go through a full San Mateo County licensing hearing and to be denied.

The board's reasoning for turning down the application centered on questions of whether the club is really a collective, its proximity to a playground and Muniz's refusal to turn over certain information to a county investigator.

Because Muniz grows the majority of the marijuana sold at Blue Heaven in his Pescadero home, deputy county counsel David Silberman argued the club doesn't meet the definition of a collective. He said members should be doing some work.

However, state laws don't define what a collective is. Muniz's attorney, Zach Wasserman, said members support a collective by making purchases and there is nothing in the law that says they have to do more.

Silberman also took aim at the club's closeness to a playground, saying it would be naive to think people who buy pot at Blue Heaven won't go there to smoke their purchases. People who go to the collective aren't allowed to consume the marijuana inside the building.

However, there haven't been any reports of smoking at the playground, officials said. And Wasserman said there is no indication that the club has had any impact on the playground.

Wasserman added that Muniz would consider turning over certain information, such as patient names, if the county agreed not to target those people for investigation or prosecution.

Even if Blue Heaven is eventually forced to shut down, it likely won't be the last collective to try to set up shop in the county. On Monday, the License Board also listened to arguments for and against the opening of a new collective in North Fair Oaks.

Brad Ehikian wants to set up a collective at 2991 El Camino Real and a grow site at 2676 Bay Road. A group of neighbors showed up at the meeting, most of whom opposed the club. The board put off a decision until its June 21 meeting while Ehikian tries to work with the neighbors on car traffic and safety worries.


NewsHawk: MedicalNeed: 420 MAGAZINE
Source:mercurynews.com
Author: Joshua Melvin San Mateo County Times
Contact: Help - San Jose Mercury News
Copyright:2010 - San Jose Mercury News
Website:San Mateo County's only medical marijuana dispensary denied business license - San Jose Mercury News
 
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