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US: Hercules quietly approves ban on medical pot clubs

Tom Lochner, Contra Costa Times

The Mercury News

Thursday 11 May 2006

---
HERCULES - The Hercules City Council on Tuesday adopted an ordinance
that makes medical marijuana dispensaries illegal without mentioning
them specifically. The vote was 4-0-1, the same as when the ordinance
was introduced two weeks ago, with Councilwoman Charleen Raines
abstaining both times.

Earlier on Tuesday, a pair of open government experts said Hercules bent
the Brown Act by failing to adequately notify the public about the
matter it was preparing to act on; a third expert went further, saying
Hercules violated the act.

But the city attorney said he is confident Hercules complied with the
law while he conceded the meeting agenda could have been more specific.

The agendas for the April 25 and Tuesday's council meeting refer to "an
ordinance ... amending Title 8 (Finance, Revenue & Taxation) Chapter 6
(Business License Tax) of the Hercules Municipal Code."

The ordinance, it turns out, rewords Municipal Code Sec. 8-6.103 on
"Unlawful Business" as follows:

"No license shall be issued ... authorizing the conduct or continuance
of any business which violates state or federal law."

The old language simply prohibited "any illegal or unlawful business."

California voters in 1996 approved marijuana for medical use on the
recommendation of a doctor. But the federal government considers
marijuana an illegal drug with no medical use.

While neither the ordinance nor an accompanying staff report mentions
any specific business, the amendment effectively bans medical marijuana
dispensaries, also known as cannabis clubs, , Hercules City Attorney
Mick Cabral agreed.

The agenda item "certainly violates at least the spirit of the Brown Act
if not the letter," said Rachel Matteo-Boehm, an attorney speaking for
the California First Amendment Coalition.

The clear purpose of the law is to give people notice of what will be
discussed, Matteo-Boehm said. The Hercules council agendas of April 25
and Tuesday, "don't give notice of what's potentially a very
controversial topic."

Jim Ewert, legal counsel for the California Newspaper Publishers
Association, went further.

The agenda description is "definitely misleading," he said. "I wouldn't
even qualify it as a description."

"With regard to whether this violates the Brown Act, I think that it
does," Ewert said. "Unless you're clairvoyant, no citizen would
understand what it is they're attempting to do here."

The staff report, by Police Chief Fred Deltorchio, says "the proposed
amendment clarifies any ambiguity by preventing business activities
which violate either federal or state law."

That statement provides some clarity, said Terry Francke, general
counsel of Californians Aware. But it belongs "not in the background but
in the foreground -- on the agenda," he said.

An Attorney General's booklet on the Brown Act provides for a "brief
general description" on the agenda to help interested members of the
public decide whether to monitor or participate in a public meeting,
Francke said. "The reference is to 'interested members of the public' --
not lawyers or municipal government wonks with a copy of the city code
at their elbow."

Cabral said that while the medical marijuana issue prompted the
council's action, "it was not intended to regulate medical marijuana. It
deals with all matters that are illegal under federal or state law, not
just medical marijuana." He could not immediately cite other types of
business the ordinance might target.

Cabral agreed the ordinance "serves the same purpose as a moratorium,"
but one that "does not have a limited duration."

A one-year moratorium on the opening of cannabis clubs in Hercules
expires in July.

Cabral said the new ordinance is "an interim step."

"We will continue to work on a comprehensive medical marijuana
regulatory scheme," he said.

However, he said Wednesday, "it would only trigger once the federal law
changes.

Cabral said that although the city complied with the noticing
requirements under the Brown Act, "I think the criticism is well taken.
We could have been more specific although I don't think under the law we
needed to be."

http://www.mercurynews.com

 

 

 

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