"Legal" marjuana is statrting to drive up crime in
John_Browning
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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-medical-marijuana-20101123,0,597942.story?track=rss
Supervisors in Los Angeles and Orange counties moved in sync Tuesday to ban medical marijuana dispensaries in unincorporated territories.
The bans, affecting an area with 1.5 million people in L.A. County and 120,000 in Orange County, were approved in 4-1 votes in both counties.
"Attracting crime and other nuisances, these facilities have a negative impact on the communities where they've operated — leading more than 100 cities and nine counties in California to pass similar ordinances," said Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who wrote L.A. County's provision.
In Orange County, Supervisor Shawn Nelson voted against the measure because he said it would exacerbate the black market for the drug. In Los Angeles, Zev Yaroslavsky was the lone no vote.
"This is not some sort of scheme or scam. This is not some sort of joke," Yaroslavsky said, noting that he had seen marijuana help friends afflicted with cancer.
Gary Kearns, a 59-year-old Los Angeles County resident suffering from AIDS, was among many members of the public who came to speak against the ban. "I submit to you that compassion is an element of successful public policy, and I would suggest that the intent of this ban is not compassionate," he said.
Yaroslavsky said the board should instead focus on dispensaries that operate illegally without a permit and wrote a motion to step up enforcement.
That measure, approved unanimously, directs county staff to take advantage of their ability to fine illegal dispensaries $1,000 a day. Although the county has used other tools in attempting to close unauthorized shops, assessing hefty fines has never been done, according to county staff.
"I'm going to say there's two bad actors," Supervisor Gloria Molina told county staff. "There's the lousy marijuana suppliers who are illegally setting up and making all the medical marijuana look bad and … [there's] you all. If you would enforce the rules, these folks wouldn't be out there operating illegally."
Molina said her office has been flooded with calls from residents saying that the illegal dispensaries have brought crime and blight.
"Why don't you use everything you have to get them the hell out of unincorporated areas?" Molina asked county staff. "I'm going to support the ban right now because you guys aren't assisting us in getting rid of the illegal operators. All of the residents are complaining, and in my area, it's really bad."
County officials said a tally of illegal dispensaries was unavailable.
Another factor in the ordinances' passage was the city of Los Angeles' recent aggressive push to shut down dispensaries that don't comply with a city ordinance that took effect four weeks ago. Some supervisors expressed concern that dispensary owners would be searching for a new home.
In Orange County, the Sheriff's Department submitted a report that found dispensaries responsible for an uptick in robberies, burglaries, weapons violations and money laundering.
Orange County supervisors had never regulated medical marijuana. But in Los Angeles County, Tuesday's votes marked a change in course. The ban reversed the county's four-year-old policy on dispensaries, which were allowed with strict location prohibitions: They could not be within 1,000 feet of churches, day-care centers, libraries, playgrounds, schools and other sensitive areas.
To date, L.A. County has not approved a single dispensary in an unincorporated area. Two were rejected and three are still pending.
The bans in both counties must be read again at a future meeting for final approval, and are expected to go into effect at the end of the year.
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"Gun control is like trying to reduce drunk driving by making it tougher for sober people to own cars."
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"A fear of weapons is a sign of ret*d sexual and emotional maturity."
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More like "legal* mariajuana".
The whole medical ruse causes the same problem anywhere. In Florida, they have the same problem but with painkillers and whatnot because they have those same kind of "medical" places; except there, it's pain stores and the drug is normally valium or oxy.
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Wherever they burn books they will also, in the end, burn human beings. ~Heinrich Heine, Almansor, 1823
?I wouldn't recommend sex, drugs or insanity for everyone, but they've always worked for me.? - Hunter S. Thompson
heh. PR BS. pure and simple. LA is doing a good thing by enforcing this ban. i keep my doctor's rec up to date and it really annoys me that so many dispensaries are so lax with their paperwork. ffs, if i wanted to just buy weed i could do so for the same prices from pot dealers. i like the protections provided by a well-run dispensary. LA has a lot of shady dispensaries that don't follow the rules. people owning several shops (you can only own/operate one), people selling other drugs at their shops, dispensaries employing unqualified (unauthorized) people, price fixing, and employees selling their product off-site.
generally, when you hear about this kind of ban or you hear about raids on dispensaries in southern california, it's a good thing. informed stoners (much less prevalent than most of us would have you believe) support these efforts. we want it decriminalized and we'll get our way, eventually. i was very heartened, after the recent "no" vote, to hear from many people who voted "no" on prop 19 that they wanted stricter language in the law.
drug-dealers, like bootleggers and rum-runners, are a scourge on our society. i'm a liberal, ffs! i want to pay taxes on my weed!
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Waltur the Walrus Slayer,
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