The Record: Officials take pot (road) trip - July 14, 2006

MICHAEL FITZGERALD
Published Friday, Jul 14, 2006
Source: http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060714/OPED0301/607140318
The mayor, vice mayor and a police lieutenant visited a medical marijuana dispensary in Sacramento recently. Afterward, the vice mayor sprang for Junior Mints.
Seriously, afterward, they grappled with the idea of a medical marijuana dispensary in Stockton.
Their struggle with this issue is, to put it kindly, protracted. California voters approved the Compassionate Use Act in 1996.
Certainly, it's a ticklish issue; yet communities all around Stockton have responsibly faced this challenge.
The most recent is Ripon. Hardly a hotbed of hippies, Ripon's council introduced a medical pot ordinance earlier this week. The final vote on it is Tuesday.
The visit by Stockton officials suggests city leaders are finally seriously researching pot clubs before deciding whether to permit one to open in Stockton.
Mayor Ed Chavez, Vice Mayor Gary Giovanetti and Lt. Dennis Smallie visited the River City Patient Center in Sacramento.
Besides its appropriate location in a semi-industrial area, the club boasts an armed guard, strict requirements to show a medical marijuana card and a whole lot of pot.
"It just seemed weird to be seeing them pull out drawers of little canisters of marijuana," said Giovanetti, fascinated. "It's such a taboo kind of thing."
The vice mayor added the club sells marijuana in canisters, brownies, cookies and liquid form.
But to get to the point, "It didn't seem like it's a rogue, criminal enterprise," Giovanetti said. "All the customers looked pretty normal."
Smallie agreed. "It seemed like it was a very well-run facility."
The Stockton contingent also met with Sacramento narcotics officers who said they tried to sting the club but found it operated legally, as far as they can tell.
Giovanetti still has concerns. What if a corrupt Stockton doctor writes prescriptions to all comers?
There are several good answers to that. Corrupt doctors falsely certify healthy workers eligible for workers' compensation, too. Worker's comp remains legitimate.
And numerous Stockton doctors, including oncologists with reputations above reproach, are quietly writing medical marijuana prescriptions to needy patients.
It bears repeating that the National Academy of Science studied marijuana in 1999 and found it had legitimate medical uses.
Besides, what if some potheads do manage to buy their pot from a well- managed pot club instead of through pushers? Weakening pushers, the modern equivalent of Prohibition gangsters, doesn't sound like such a bad thing.
Chavez, who was formerly Stockton's police chief, said the trip eased his qualms somewhat.
"I think we can definitely say that it increased an openness toward - I'm looking at other issues - but certainly being more open toward it," said Chavez.
The mayor said he's asked city staff to answer his lingering questions. Within a couple of weeks, he hopes to have enough information to make a decision.
"Personally, I'm not at the point where I'm yea or nay on it," Chavez said.
Kudos to those who made this fact-finding trip. Facts, scientific and legal, not politics and prejudice, are the way to find the right policy on a Stockton dispensary.
The politics are there, though.
California voters approved Proposition 215 statewide, but conservative San Joaquin County voted it down.
On the other hand, District Attorney James Willett released a position paper saying he'll allow a medical marijuana dispensary, as long as it's nonprofit.
His sensible recommendations for investigating cultivation and possession of marijuana cases also instructs officers to lay off Proposition 215 growers and users - as long as they can show their ID cards and prescriptions, and don't have too much pot.
The date of this memo's release also shows the district attorney has a sense of humor. He released it on April 20, 2006 - 4/20. 420 is a widely known code word for pot.
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River City Patient Center
The article in the Compassional Coalition is exactly what triggered me to respond - This dispensary does NOT have "loads of medicine" or however the article put it, the armed guard is asleep and every time I have gone there I see more people that are scary than I do people that are sick. They have two dogs [at least] both large breed that sit around there, but I was told I couldn't bring my five pound poodle in. Maybe they were afraid their dogs would eat him. I don't know. But on a scale of one to ten, with one being I hate this place and will never go again and ten being I love this place, I would give River City a 1. I have had heroin connections that are more articulate than the people behind the counter at River city. Thanks for listening, Love, Maggi
I must apologise for your
I must apologise for your unpleasant experience at the River City Patient center. As I do not live in Sac, I could not find the place myself lastnight, I was on W El Camino, probably not far off, but missed the meeting as a result of poor planning. It just seems that if the Compassionate Coalition held the National meeting there, River City Patients Group must be a proactive member of the community thus gaining my support. I wont bring my dog when I come...
~J~
RCPC
National Compassionate Coalition meetings are no longer held at River City Patient Center.
Solano County is currently the National Headquarters. Accordingly, Solano hosts national meetings.
In depth court reports by Vanessa Nelson can now be found exclusively on:
http://www.medicalmarijuanaofamerica.org