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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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Last modified
4/6/2017 4:28:57 PM
Creation date
3/14/2013 4:00:37 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
65A
Date
3/18/2013
Destruction Year
2018
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Based on the foregoing, it is clear that virtually all marijuana dispensaries are not legal enterprises <br />under either federal or state law. <br />LAWS IN OTHER STATES <br />Besides California, at the time of publication of this White Paper, thirteen other states have enacted <br />medical marijuana laws on their books, whereby to some degree marijuana recommended or <br />prescribed by a physician to a specified patient may be legally possessed. These states are Alaska, <br />Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, <br />Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. And, possession of marijuana under one ounce has now <br />been decriminalized in Massachusetts. 2I <br />STOREFRONT MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES AND COOPERATIVES <br />Since the passage of the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, many storefront marijuana businesses <br />have opened in California." Some are referred to as dispensaries, and some as cooperatives; but it is <br />how they operate that removes them from any umbrella of legal protection. These facilities operate <br />as if they are pharmacies. Most offer different types and grades of marijuana. Some offer baked <br />goods that contain marijuana.23 Monetary donations are collected from the patient or primary <br />caregiver when marijuana or food items are received. The items are not technically sold since that <br />would be a criminal violation of the statutes. 24 These facilities are able to operate because they <br />apply for and receive business licenses from cities and counties. <br />Federally, all existing storefront marijuana businesses are subject to search and closure since they <br />violate federal law. 25 Their mere existence violates federal law. Consequently, they have no right to <br />exist or operate, and arguably cities and counties in California have no authority to sanction them. <br />Similarly, in California there is no apparent authority for the existence of these storefront marijuana <br />businesses. The Medical Marijuana Program Act of 2004 allows patients and primary caregivers to <br />grow and cultivate marijuana, and no one else. 26 Although California Health and Safety Code <br />section 11362.775 offers some state legal protection for true collectives and cooperatives, no parallel <br />protection exists in the statute for any storefront business providing any narcotic. <br />The common dictionary definition of collectives is that they are organizations jointly managed by <br />those using its facilities or services. Legally recognized cooperatives generally possess "the <br />following features: control and ownership of each member is substantially equal; members are <br />limited to those who will avail themselves of the services furnished by the association; transfer of <br />ownership interests is prohibited or limited; capital investment receives either no return or a limited <br />return; economic benefits pass to the members on a substantially equal basis or on the basis of their <br />patronage of the association; members are not personally liable for obligations of the association in <br />the absence of a direct undertaking or authorization by them; death, bankruptcy or withdrawal of one <br />or more members does not terminate the association; and [the] services of the association are <br />furnished primarily for the use of the members."27 Marijuana businesses, of any kind, do not meet <br />this legal definition. <br />Actual medical dispensaries are commonly defined as offices in hospitals, schools, or other <br />institutions from which medical supplies, preparations, and treatments are dispensed. Hospitals, <br />hospices, home health care agencies, and the like are specifically included in the code as primary <br />caregivers as long as they have "consistently assumed responsibility for the housing, health, or <br />safety" of a patient.28 Clearly, it is doubtful that any of the storefront marijuana businesses currently <br />© 2009 California Police Chiefs Assn. 6 All Rights Reserved <br />65A-67
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