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US: Lawndale City Council decides to initiate ban of marijuana dispensaries

Shirley Hsu

Daily Breeze

Wednesday 08 Nov 2006

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Leaders reject a recommendation to allow but regulate facilities that
distribute pot for medicinal purposes.

Lawndale City Council members this week quickly shot down a proposal to
regulate medical marijuana dispensaries in the city, opting instead to
direct staff to look into banning the establishments altogether.

Without much discussion on the topic, the City Council voted unanimously
Monday to reject the recommendation from the Planning Commission that it
adopt the ordinance regulating dispensaries, praised by one medical
marijuana advocate for being the most comprehensive set of regulations
he had ever seen.

"This ordinance covers everything," said Chris Fusco, a field
coordinator for medical marijuana advocacy group Americans for Safe
Access, before the council's decision. "I think it perfectly addresses
the concerns of the community and the needs of medical cannabis patients."

The ordinance would have required dispensaries not be located within 600
feet of schools, playgrounds, parks, churches and similar community
centers; that they close before 7 p.m.; that they not allow minors
without a parent; and that they have security guards to patrol the
dispensary and a two-block radius surrounding it. Patrons must
immediately leave the site and not consume medical marijuana until they
return home.

Councilman Larry Rudolph made the motion to reject the ordinance and
instead look into a ban.

"I don't think it's appropriate anywhere," he said, adding that because
other South Bay cities have banned them, Lawndale would become a magnet
for dispensaries. He said he believed drugs would get in the hands of
children and that it was too easy to get a doctor's recommendation.

"Until the court sorts this one out, I don't want one here," he said,
referring to the conflict between state law, which permits usage of the
drug by "seriously ill" patients with doctors' recommendations, and
federal law, which classifies the drug as a controlled substance.

Dispensaries have recently met with a cold reception in the South Bay,
with Torrance, Gardena, Hawthorne, Hermosa Beach, Lomita, Rancho Palos
Verdes and Redondo Beach issuing temporary or permanent bans. Lawndale
in June enacted a temporary ban on the establishments.

The regulations Lawndale rejected would have prohibited alcohol, allowed
the distribution of plant cuttings, and limited the amount of marijuana
provided to individuals to amounts consistent with state law, a
provision Fusco said showed foresight. Many of the regulations were
similar to those approved in May by Los Angeles County supervisors for
unincorporated areas of the county.

City staff disagreed with the Planning Commission on one point,
recommending prohibiting the consumption of marijuana on dispensary
property.

Two Lawndale residents spoke in opposition of marijuana dispensaries,
and two others spoke in support.

Bob Burrill of San Pedro, who with his wife had hoped to open a
dispensary in Lawndale, said on-site consumption is necessary for
employees and volunteers because many are patients themselves.

"This is not like a bartender who drinks on the job. It's more like a
pharmacist who needs to take Vicodin during the day (to deal with
pain)," he said.

Burrill said a typical dispensary has three rooms: a waiting room, a
dispensing room and an office for employees.

The last would be the only place where employees would be allowed to
consume marijuana through vaporizers or in edible form, but not smoking,
he said.

Months ago, the city learned of two dispensaries operating in the city
without business licenses.

"The Lawndale Collective," which operated from a Hawthorne Boulevard
storefront, left about two months ago after being cited by city code
enforcement officials for violating the moratorium, City Prosecutor Doug
Haubert said.

The other dispensary left town before the city took enforcement action.
http://www.dailybreeze.com/

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