Gilroy, CA - Council will not block MediLeaf

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Cali smoke

Cali smoke

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Council will not block MediLeaf
8:00 PM
By Chris Bone

Council members say they will stay out of staff's way as they make a decision regarding an application for the county's first medical marijuana dispensary in north Gilroy. Meanwhile, police are still investigating the federal implications of allowing a dispensary, which would not likely have a significant impact on crime, according to data from similar cities and law enforcement.
Gilroy's potential business, MediLeaf, could land at 1207 First St., near Togo's and First Street Coffee, if city staff sign off on the business application. The applicants are Morgan Hill residents and real estate professionals Batzi Kuburovich and Neil Forrest. Medical marijuana is allowed - tacitly or overtly - at the state and local level, but prohibited at the federal level, which, along with the possibility of increased crime, is what Gilroy police and opponents here are most concerned about. Opponents also worry people will simply feign symptoms to acquire prescriptions.

Proponents, including many Gilroyans, say the dispensary will decrease street-level sales and associated crime while providing a service to people with debilitating ailments. They also point to statistics from cities with medical marijuana businesses that show crime trends have not seen any major changes since those businesses opened.

Tulare - a city of about 52,000 just 45 miles southeast of Fresno with similar agricultural roots as Gilroy's - allowed two medical marijuana dispensaries to open in 2006 and 2008. Since they opened, police reported only one break-in, Tulare Police Department Capt. Jerry Breckinridge said. A couple of non-drug related assaults have also occurred, but nothing like the "riffraff" or rampant crime people in the relatively conservative city once feared, he and others said.

"All the controversy has died down. We just really haven't had any incidents with either clinic," said Tulare Mayor Craig Vejvoda, whose financial advisor's office sits across the street from one of the dispensaries.

Most authorities in metropolitan areas such as San Francisco and Los Angeles reported a similar lack of dispensary-related crime. More than 200 dispensaries operate in the greater Los Angeles area, and aside from occasional raids on dispensaries by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency - which U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has ordered to be relaxed even as his office prosecutes earlier marijuana cases - the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department has not noticed an uptick in crime associated with the shops.

"The medical marijuana dispensaries in our jurisdiction have been relatively benign," L.A. Sheriff Spokesperson Steve Whitmore said. "We don't have (break-ins or assaults), and we have a very open-door relationship with the businesses because the sheriff believes it's important to be a part of the community and not just an enforcer."

Californians approved a medical marijuana bill in 1996 that allows the possession and cultivation of medical marijuana for people with proper prescriptions, but federal law views the plant as illegal - a point that rattles Gilroy police officers and Councilman Bob Dillon. Neither Santa Clara County nor Gilroy have any legislation on the books, but local council members, including Dillon, said they were disinclined to create a Gilroy ordinance in the absence of any residential outcry.

"We need to let the process go through," Councilman Craig Gartman said.

The application would only go before the Planning Commission and City Council if a community member with a vested or nearby business interest appealed MediLeaf's potential approval. Staff could also hinge any approval on operating conditions similar to those for liquor stores.

To avoid the proliferation of dispensaries in its city, Tulare's City Council passed a law limiting them to one per 25,000 residents. In Goleta - a city of about 59,000 just west of Santa Barbara - the council has expressed support for medical marijuana, but the body voted unanimously earlier this month in favor of a law banning dispensaries while it considers more specific regulations. In the meantime, Gilroy officials seem posed to play it by ear.

"I haven't heard any reason why the council should get involved," Councilman Perry Woodward said. "As far as I understand it, this is a lawful business and doesn't present any issues that wouldn't be presented if someone wanted to open a pharmacy."

Not so, said Gary Stutheit, owner and operator of Gilroy Medical Pharmacy at the corner of Sixth and Princevalle streets. The friendly apothecary isn't opposed to medical marijuana in principle, but he said he would never sell any because it violates federal law and he has heard of nothing but problems.

"I really think these places get out of hand and turn into money-makers, and people abuse the system with phony prescriptions and sell the drugs on the street," Stutheit said. He pointed to the Oct. 2008 arrest of Adroa Anderson, a Santa Cruz man who used a doctor-prescribed medical marijuana card to buy marijuana he then repackaged and sold on the streets - racking up $100,000 and four guns over a two year period - police said. Anderson remains in jail, according to records.

"It's inviting more criminal activity there, and we probably don't need that right now," Stutheit said. Burglars have broken into his store "a couple of times over the years," he said.

Currently, residents who have prescriptions have to drive to Redwood City, Millbrae, Oakland, San Francisco or Santa Cruz to purchase medical marijuana, which dispensaries buy from private, licensed growers who usually sell a pound for $3,500 to $4,000, Kuburovich said. A store-bought ounce, in turn, goes for about $400 - or about $6,400 per pound - excluding an extra $37 per ounce for unspecified taxes. Any profit will pay off overhead, said Kuburovich. Legal marijuana comes in all types, similar to tea, and is typically bottled in orange plastic vials. Dispensaries - as with any other prescription drug distributor - do not charge sales tax.
 
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tophmaster

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wow damn they should let one out in gilroy. and thats crazy about that dude down here in santa cruz who resold all that shit. like there is no way he got that bud from any sc clubs. they are way to damn expensive he would make no money
 
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Mr.PurplePumpkn

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The friendly apothecary isn't opposed to medical marijuana in principle, but he said he would never sell any because it violates federal law and he has heard of nothing but problems.

"I really think these places get out of hand and turn into money-makers, and people abuse the system with phony prescriptions and sell the drugs on the street," Stutheit said. He pointed to the Oct. 2008 arrest of Adroa Anderson, a Santa Cruz man who used a doctor-prescribed medical marijuana card to buy marijuana he then repackaged and sold on the streets - racking up $100,000 and four guns over a two year period.

Are we talking about the same federal laws that support water boarding of non-US detainees, which the military arrest on a whim, or the same federal laws that allow monsanto to buy up half of the entire earths vegetable seed companies and then sell GMO seeds under the pervious bussiness name, or the same laws that also allow monsanto to patent f* pig genes which encode for stress resistance so they can cram them into even smaller pins, or the same laws that support state sponsored terriorsim??? People need to wake the f* up...federal laws..pssssh, as TOOL said it best, "Question Yourself, Think for authority" I pretty much believe the exact oppostie of what the news and govt tell me, makes knowing the truth a lot easier... , rant -- we let them hit the world trade center, why do you think there was a f* molten river of lava under the building or the beams where cut horizontally, or the "scenario" for this exact F* attack had been written years prior... it was like USS Cole all over again, make the people scard, yell terriosm, terriosm, terriosm, let them attack and kill americans, americans turn into animals, scream war, and bam let'em vote decleration of war, hello Oil, Mercenaries, Gun sells, and third world rape...


The problem with the Santa Cruz incident is the real world, and I for one support legislation that would prevent this sort of problem,ie stricter med cards etc etc... but people we have to understand, for every market, no matter what, legal or illegal, a black market or sub market of it will always exist... Hell I still to have family that sell "illegal Tommy Hillfiger and Okley knock offs... hahaha remember fokleys, its just the way they make money, easier for them to sell that shit at a party so they can sit around and be porch monkeys all day, while the other half feels they have to work 12hrs a day for minimum wage, but thats they way they want it.... Just a life style and individual choice

kroger market...upscale...grocery store standard for mid class.... Whole Foods / Earthfare for upper class, piggy wiggly/ bells for low class

same goes for perscription drugs

CVS - mid class
The corner - low class


If you dont believe your Govt has been bending you over and shoving a log up your ass while your blind folded.... wake up

http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/

Take what you want, research the rest and make your own mind up.... The truth is out there
 
500lbs Guerilla

500lbs Guerilla

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Heres an update:


Council mulls local regulations for medical marijuana dispensary
Aug 3, 2009
By Chris Bone

A month and a half after Police Chief Denise Turner rejected an application to open the county's first medical marijuana clinic in Gilroy because of federal restrictions, the city council voted 6-1 to direct staff to generate local regulations for consideration, giving Medileaf's diligent applicants room to breathe for now.

State law permits medical marijuana, but federal law prohibits it. No county or local laws address the issue, which leaves council members in a legal no man's land they vowed to navigate starting in September, after their month-long summer recess.

Councilman Bob Dillon was the lone dissenting vote Monday night, citing the federal government's supreme jurisdiction against marijuana and the mercurial political will of the U.S. Attorney General's office.

"I don't like the idea of the Feds coming down here and arresting people … I just don't see this as an ethical medication," Dillon said, adding that prescribing marijuana differs from other medications that physicians regulate through dosage and consumption imperatives.

Councilman Peter Arellano, a local physician who works for Kaiser-Permanente, countered that medical marijuana should not be cast aside as a freak drug beyond control given the state and federal governments' regulations over alcohol and tobacco. Laws barring people from drinking in public should serve as examples for laws barring people from smoking marijuana in public. It's the same idea, Arellano said before mentioning the corruptible powers of legal prescription drugs. Councilman Perry Woodward said he agreed with Arellano's points.

"Do we want the government to say or regulate what happens between a patient and their doctor? That's the basic issue," Arellano said. "A lot of people can abuse legal medications. Any drug has the potential of being abused … but if we look at (Medileaf's application) and put down a good policy, a good ordinance, I think we can have something that's a win-win for everyone."

While staff works on filling the local legal vacuum, Medileaf co-applicant Batzi Kuburovich smiled and offered only a brief statement after Monday night's meeting: "God bless the city council, and I love Gilroy."

Along with fellow Morgan Hill real estate professional Neil Forrest and the pair's Oakland-based marijuana lawyer, James Anthony, Kuburovich is trying to open Medileaf at 7581 Monterey St., near Fourth Street and next to Pinnacle Bank. The original proposed location was 1207 First St., near Togo's and First Street Coffee.

Dispensary proponents, including many Gilroyans, say the business will decrease street-level sales and associated crime while providing a service to people with debilitating ailments. They also point to statistics from cities with medical marijuana businesses that show crime trends have not seen any major increases since those businesses opened. However, opponents, including Turner, argue crime will increase and that residents will feign symptoms to obtain prescriptions so they can sell the drug on the streets.

From small, agrarian-based cities like Tulare to metropolitan areas such as Los Angeles - where more than 200 dispensaries operate in the greater area - law officials, backed by federal statistics, said they have not noticed an uptick in crime associated with the shops since Californians approved medical marijuana in 1996.

California law allows the possession and cultivation of medical marijuana for people with proper prescriptions, but federal law views the drug as completely illegal. Neither Santa Clara County nor Gilroy have any legislation on the books, and Mayor Al Pinheiro said he recently spoke with the mayors of Tulare and Santa Cruz, both of whom told him that thoughtful regulations - such as one clinic per 25,000 residents - have prevented their worst nightmares from coming true.

Also there Monday night to testify to this was Scott Wade, general manager of Delta IX, a private security firm that secures Greenway, a medical marijuana facility in Santa Cruz.

"We've actually taken control of the neighborhood and done our part to police the area," Wade said, adding that his firm has already completed a security plan for Medileaf. "We have had zero instances with our dispensaries (in Santa Cruz). There's no smoking outside. We check their recommendations, their drivers' licenses … and we'd be more than happy to work with police here and report to city council on an ongoing basis."

Currently, residents who have legitimate prescriptions have to drive to Redwood City, Millbrae, Oakland, San Francisco or Santa Cruz to purchase medical marijuana, which dispensaries buy from private growers who usually sell a pound for $3,500 to $4,000, Kuburovich said. A store-bought ounce, in turn, goes for about $400 - or about $6,400 per pound - excluding the extra $37 per ounce for taxes. Any profit will pay off overhead, said Kuburovich, and not line his or Forrest's pockets. Legal marijuana comes in all types, similar to tea, and are typically bottled in orange plastic vials.

Kelley-Jo Wendlandt showed up with her husband and legal caretaker, Greg Wendlandt, Monday night to advocate Medileaf's application. For the past 20 years, Kelley-Jo Wendlandt has struggled with a debilitating and worsening spinal condition. Pills work to a certain extent, but for the past eight years she has smoked medical marijuana or eaten marijuana-laced brownies to relieve the pain. Of course, that's only after strapping herself into a makeshift bed in the back of her car. Stiffened by a torso cast that slows her stroll and accompanied by her husband's hand beneath her elbow, Kelley-Jo Wendlandt implored the council to think about her and other locals who have to drive beyond Gilroy to obtain their legal prescriptions.

"It's a pain in the ass," Kelley-Jo Wendlandt said outside the council chambers after the 6-1 vote. Minutes before, she told the council she takes "a lot of medication, but marijuana is the one that helps me very much."

Before the vote, the council watched a CBS "60 Minutes" special on medical marijuana that addressed criminal concerns and break-ins at dispensaries. Afterward, Turner cited recent marijuana-related arrests in the community.

While originally against Medileaf, Councilman Dion Bracco said Monday he was on the fence.

"The more I've learned about it, the softer I've gotten," Bracco said, adding that he hasn't made up his mind because of concern of possible abuse.

Medileaf attorney James Anthony replied that his clients were striving to be "good neighbors" and chided Turner's report as containing "misinterpretation(s) of state law" and "several false assertions showing either an ignorance of the law or perhaps some degree of bias."

Council member Cat Tucker seemed to lean toward favoring the application, but she admitted that either side of the aisle can cherry pick the right science.

"This is one of those things that everyone has an opinion on. The data can go for or against," Tucker said. "I've talked with community members, and the majority of people are in favor of this, I believe."
 
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