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WHITE PAPER ON MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES <br />by <br />CALIFORNIA POLICE CHIEFS ASSOCIATION'S <br />TASK FORCE ON MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES <br />EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br />INTRODUCTION <br />Proposition 215, an initiative authorizing the limited possession, cultivation, and use of marijuana by <br />patients and their care providers for certain medicinal purposes recommended by a physician without <br />subjecting such persons to criminal punishment, was passed by California voters in 1996. This was <br />supplemented by the California State Legislature's enactment in 2003 of the Medical Marijuana <br />Program Act (SB 420) that became effective in 2004. The language of Proposition 215 was codified <br />in California as the Compassionate Use Act, which added section 11362.5 to the California Health & <br />Safety Code. Much later, the language of Senate Bill 420 became the Medical Marijuana Program <br />Act (MMPA), and was added to the California Health & Safety Code as section 11362.7 et seq. <br />Among other requirements, it purports to direct all California counties to set up and administer a <br />voluntary identification card system for medical marijuana users and their caregivers. Some <br />counties have already complied with the mandatory provisions of the MMPA, and others have <br />challenged provisions of the Act or are awaiting outcomes of other counties' legal challenges to it <br />before taking affirmative steps to follow all of its dictates. And, with respect to marijuana <br />dispensaries, the reaction of counties and municipalities to these nascent businesses has been <br />decidedly mixed. Some have issued permits for such enterprises. Others have refused to do so <br />within their jurisdictions. Still others have conditioned permitting such operations on the condition <br />that they not violate any state or federal law, or have reversed course after initially allowing such <br />activities within their geographical borders by either limiting or refusing to allow any further <br />dispensaries to open in their community. This White Paper explores these matters, the apparent <br />conflicts between federal and California law, and the scope of both direct and indirect adverse <br />impacts of marijuana dispensaries in local communities. It also recounts several examples that could <br />be emulated of what some governmental officials and law enforcement agencies have already <br />instituted in their jurisdictions to limit the proliferation of marijuana dispensaries and to mitigate <br />their negative consequences. <br />FEDERAL LAW <br />Except for very limited and authorized research purposes, federal law through the Controlled <br />Substances Act absolutely prohibits the use of marijuana for any legal purpose, and classifies it as a <br />banned Schedule I drug. It cannot be legally prescribed as medicine by a physician. And, the <br />federal regulation supersedes any state regulation, so that under federal law California medical <br />marijuana statutes do not provide a legal defense for cultivating or possessing marijuana-even with <br />a physician's recommendation for medical use. <br />© 2009 California Police Chiefs Assn. iv All Rights Reserved <br />65A-59