County Orders End To Medical Marijuana Dispensary In Santa Venetia

Proprietors of Marin's newest medical marijuana dispensary are locked in a battle with Marin County officials who have ordered the Santa Venetia outlet to cease operations immediately.

A county inspection is scheduled for next week at Tree of Life, a small business that has been operating in recent weeks at 292 N. San Pedro Road, between a Laundromat and a 7-Eleven store less than a mile east of the Marin Civic Center.

Tree of Life is the first dispensary in the unincorporated portion of the county. Other Marin dispensaries include Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana in Fairfax; Marin Holistic Solutions and Going Green in Corte Madera; and Caregiver Compassion Center in Sausalito.

On March 17, county officials ordered the Santa Venetia operation to shut its doors within 15 days and schedule an inspection to prove compliance or face a code enforcement hearing and, if unsuccessful at the hearing, face fines of $2,500 per day per violation. Pending a ruling against the dispensary, if operations continue there the matter could go to court, county officials said.

An inspection will be conducted next week, but the group running the dispensary has no intention of halting operations, said Colleen Doherty, a San Anselmo land use attorney representing the dispensary she described as small, strictly controlled, protected by security cameras and staffed by knowledgeable people who follow state law.

"Tree of Life disputes that they are not allowed in Marin County," Doherty
said Friday, citing a 1992 ordinance passed by the county Board of Supervisors supporting the concept of medical marijuana use as proof it was OK to do business in the area.

"Right now there is no medical dispensary in the north part of the county, so there is nowhere for people to go," she said. "It's badly needed and we have a ordinance in the municipal code that says the Board of Supervisors fully support providing medical marijuana to people who need it.

"It's really a zoning dispute," Doherty said.

County officials disagree that the 1992 ordinance invites dispensaries to open in unincorporated areas.

"It's not a permitted use," said Brian Crawford, county planning director. "We don't have any specific permitted land use for medical marijuana dispensaries."

The 1992 ordinance, passed before medical marijuana became legal in California through Proposition 215 in 1996, "expresses compassion" for the ill people of Marin whose suffering is alleviated by medicinal marijuana use and supports federal and state representatives' interest in allowing its use for medical purposes, but makes no allowances for dispensaries in unincorporated Marin, county officials said. To allow such businesses to operate, the board would have to amend the development code to allow dispensaries as a permitted or conditional use, according to the county.

"Our position is that even though the board has made some support on medical marijuana, they have never ever adopted a policy on that, so we plan on following up," Sheriff Bob Doyle said. Specific action has not yet been determined, he said.

"It's in close proximity to schools - the 7-Eleven store has created some law enforcement issues," he said. "We're not making any value judgments about (medical marijuana). É We just don't think that's an appropriate location."

Santa Venetia resident Mary Feller agreed.

"I think my concerns are just that this is in the middle of a residential neighborhood," she said, saying she was concerned about the potential for crime and increased traffic in the area.

"In my personal view I am a total supporter of medical marijuana. I really want to be clear about that, but it needs to be appropriately sited and I think in the middle of a residential neighborhood is not an appropriate site."


NewsHawk: Ganjarden: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Contra Costa Times
Author: Jennifer Upshaw Swartz
Contact: Contra Costa Times
Copyright: 2010 Bay Area News Group
Website: County orders end to medical marijuana dispensary in Santa Venetia
 
It's never an "appropriate" location, according to these people. A zoning issue? Are you telling me that there are guidelines laid out for every single type of business and what zone it is to be placed in? I was under the assumption that their are three different types of zoning: residential, commercial and industrial. (Or did I get that from SimCity?)

It seems to me that a MMJ dispensary is a business. Do they hold similar views on pharmacies?

I recall a story from a few years ago about a dispensary in I believe it was Fresno and the local City Govmint had a problem with the dispensary being about 1.25 miles from an Elementary School. The dispensary owners asked why it was bad to have a respectable, secure dispensary 1.25 miles from the school when there was a strip club less than half a mile away. (Which had been there for 20 some odd years or something.) As if the city council people were shocked, they went about closing down the strip club so they could close down the dispensary. But they lost and both the strip club and dispensary are still standing.


I have a better idea! Instead of worrying what our children have access to, why not TEACH THEM AND INSTILL SOME VALUES AND MORALS!
 
:goodjob: I fully agree, if parents stop being lazy and become more willing and properly informed to talk to their kids about sensitive subjects it wouldn't matter where there is a dispensary. If there can be a Walgreen's down the road from a school, where they sell pharms and OTC meds (which kids can readily get their hands on i.e. steal them), then how is a peaceful medical dispensary the sore thumb here? We need to have logic coincide with morality and there shall be justice that everyone agrees with.:peacetwo:
 
We need to have logic coincide with morality and there shall be justice that everyone agrees with.:peacetwo:


You done hit it on the head! Our society is sooo fuuuull of morality and soooo lacking in logic that it makes me want to blow my own head up.
 
People seem to fail to realize that the drugs are not the cause of the violence, the black market is. There has been 10 solid years of evidence that legal medical marijuana dispensaries don't have any upward effect on crime. It isn't like a 12 year old could walk into a one and get a sack of ganja. Unless he had his card, which he cant get without his parent permission.

Liquor stores get robbed way more than dispensaries do. That 7-eleven is a greater "threat" to the community than the dispensaries is, what is it doing in a "residential" area? Just Madness.:peacetwo:
 
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