Los Angeles City Council Adopts First Reading of Medical Marijuana Dispensary Law
Advocates protest buffer zones as "poison pill" certain to undermine implementationLos Angeles, CA -- After more than two years of
deliberation, the Los Angeles City Council voted 11-3
this afternoon to adopt the first reading of an ordinance regulating
the sale of medical marijuana and establishing
rules for the operation of dispensing collectives and cooperatives,
otherwise known
as dispensaries. Patients and advocates worked tirelessly throughout
this process to improve several versions of an ordinance they
considered to be flawed. While advocates take credit for improvements
to the ordinance, they claim that the arbitrary cap on the number of
facilities and the proximity restrictions from a laundry list of
so-called "sensitive uses" will undermine effective implementation of
the law. A second reading and final vote on the ordinance will occur
next week.
"This is a bittersweet victory for medical marijuana patients in Los
Angeles," said Don Duncan, California Director with Americans for Safe
Access (ASA), the nationwide advocacy organization that played a
pivotal role in convincing the City Council to reject a proposal that
banned medical marijuana sales. "Although historic, the passage of
medical marijuana regulations by the second largest city in the country
has been tempered by restrictions that threaten to wipe out nearly all
of the
dispensaries in Los Angeles."
Included in the ordinance passed today
was a restriction advocates are calling a "poison pill,"
which prohibits dispensaries from locating near residential property or
within 1,000 feet of a school, library, park, and many other sensitive
uses. The Council rejected another proposal that would allow for a
500-foot
proximity restriction, and instead chose the 1,000-foot restriction,
without sufficient analysis from the Planning Department showing the
impact of such a decision. Some Council
members
objected to these restrictions, indicating that the current ordinance
would effectively close all of the
dispensaries in their districts. Advocates estimate that dispensaries
will be unable to locate in virtually any of the commercial zones in
the city and instead will be relegated to remote industrial zones,
making it unnecessarily onerous for many patients.
During the past two years of deliberations, hundreds of collectively
and
cooperatively-run dispensaries opened throughout the city, putting
tremendous pressure on the Council to act quickly. However, advocates
and opponents alike have been taken by surprise when the location
restriction was proposed
yesterday at the end of a long day of discussion. "Debate about whether
the City of Los Angeles should regulate
the sale of medical marijuana is over; we now have an ordinance,"
continued Duncan. "However, we still need to work with city government
and community members in the coming
months to address its shortcomings."
Advocates also called the imposition of a cap on the number of
dispensaries arbitrary, whether limited to 70, set by community
district, or 137, the estimated number of facilities registered with
the city at the time of its moratorium. "The
whole point of an environmental impact assessment, which allegedly took
place during the moratorium, was to study the impact of restrictions
like these," said ASA spokesperson Kris Hermes. "Unfortunately, that
was never sufficiently done." The vast majority of registered
dispensaries do not comply with the
ordinance's proximity restrictions and will either be forced to move or
show that they have been "good neighbors" under a provision giving the
city discretion to allow facilities to stay where they are.
Despite its faults, ASA is calling the passage of this regulatory
ordinance by the state's
largest city an important step toward implementation of the law and an
action that other cities can and should be taking. "Los
Angeles
has shown that the adoption of dispensary regulations is
not only possible in other cities, but that it is also practical and
prudent," continued Hermes. Far from being the first city in the state
to regulate medical marijuana dispensaries, Los Angeles follows at
least 40 other cities and counties in California that have adopted such
regulations.