Orange County Dispensary Ban Case

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amstercal

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And so it continues...


SANTA ANA — An Orange County Superior Court judge next week is expected to rule on whether Costa Mesa can ban marijuana dispensaries.
Judge David R. Chaffee will rule on whether to permit the city to shut down five marijuana dispensaries on Fair Drive as nuisances, but his decision could have broader implications, said Elena Gerli of Jones & Mayer, the law firm Costa Mesa city contracts with.
If Chaffee dismisses the city's argument that the dispensaries are nuisances because Costa Mesa has no zoning that allows them, he essentially will be ruling that California cities cannot ban dispensaries permitted under the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, Gerli said.
The city's position, however, is that amendments to state code that took effect Jan. 1 allow that very thing: marijuana dispensary regulation at the local level. Costa Mesa has an ordinance banning dispensaries under zoning law that considers them a nuisance. The defense argues state law only allows for strict regulation, not an outright ban.
The businesses in question: names like OC Wellness, Illuminade and Herban Elements, which is owned by former City Council candidate Sue Lester, were shut down in April along with seven massage parlors in the same business complex.
Chaffee upheld the bans against the massage parlors — which police raided after conducting a months-long investigation into prostitution — but told the city's attorneys they would need to bolster their arguments against the marijuana businesses.
The city's attorneys said little in court but argued in a case filing that the new state law supported the city's ban.
The arguments by the dispensaries' defense attorneys are twofold: Costa Mesa authorities targeted the five because of their location — tucked in a business complex among the massage parlors — and simply because they dispense marijuana.
Costa Mesa code enforcement officers slapped several of the businesses with building code violations when they shut them down. Chaffee on Friday ordered them to rectify the violations. That, in itself, is a tangled web, attorneys were overheard saying outside the courtroom.
Dispensary owners up to now have not been able to get code enforcement officers to come out to the businesses to check on the changes. Dispensaries are banned, after all, so code enforcement officers can't sign off on changes to something that shouldn't be there in the first place, attorneys said.
Two weeks ago Chaffee allowed the dispensaries to reopen pending his ruling next week.

http://www.dailypilot.com/news/tn-dpt-0604-dispensaries-20110603,0,1019825.story
 
Illmind

Illmind

1,741
163
massage parlors and mm clinics? when does the real police work happen? might as well go stake out a bar around closing time while there at it.
 
D

darkcloudy

31
8
I had to re-read the "along with closing down seven massage parlors" a few times to make sure I didnt misread that.. Hahahaha always gotta try and make things sound way worse by throwing other BS along in MMJ news.
 
Texas Kid

Texas Kid

Some guy with a light
4,159
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I am pretty sure it is goin to shape up like it is here in Colorado, the municipalities have every right to limit or outright ban despensaries through zoning, permitting, and city ordinances and really they always have. Just because the state has a proposition on the books allowing for mmj, that doesn't mean every town is obligated to have one or even accomidate patients in any way.

Just look at strip joints and liquer stores..plenty of "dry" counties out there and towns with no strip joint even though they are legal as legal can be. There is not a methadone clinic in every town either, most have to drive a good ways to another town. I wouldn't under estimate the power a small town can have over its residence.

Ultimately you will probably see the despensaries consolidate in more populus areas and cities and smaller towns will zone them out.

Tex
 

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