Oaksterdam May Be No More But..

Pinch

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Article Last Updated: 04/11/2005 08:Rasta:56 AM


Pot club review finds few issues

Activists eye more Oakland sites, longer hours


By Heather MacDonald, STAFF WRITER



OAKLAND, CA – Oaksterdam may be no more, but Oakland's four medical marijuana clubs are thriving seven months after city officials imposed sweeping new rules that extinguished the pot mecca.
City officials found no serious problems associated with the cannabis clubs during a recent review, and owners and pot advocates said they would push City Council to allow more dispensaries to open.

"The lack of problems shows pot clubs can be good neighbors, good citizens, interested in helping our community," said Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative.

Council President Ignacio De La Fuente (Glenview-Fruitvale) said he was pleased the regulations successfully reduced nuisances caused by several unregulated clubs.

"The city wants to get marijuana to people who need it formedical reasons," De La Fuente said. "Oakland has really set the pace for the region and the state."

The city has received several complaints that patients have been treated rudely at the clubs, paid for more cannabis than they actually received and were forced to disclose confidential medical information.

Medical marijuana advocates said those were common problems in emerging markets and would be eased by increased competition if more clubs are permitted to open throughout Oakland.

"The limit of four is artificial and not based on anything," said Hilary McQuie, a spokeswoman for Americans for Safe Access. "They need better criteria, real data."

However, De La Fuente said he would not consider expanding the number of clubs because not one Oakland resident has complained to the city about not being able to obtain medical marijuana.

McQuie said the lack of complaints shouldn't be interpreted as proving the four clubs have adequate capacity.

"Not only are more people being diagnosed with illnesses that respond to marijuana, but increased confidence in the legality of medical marijuana is encouraging people who otherwise have shied away to get their card," McQuie said.

There is anecdotal evidence the clubs forced out of Oakland have relocated to areas that haven't yet regulated the dispensaries, including San Francisco and unincorporated parts of Alameda County.

The director of the Berkeley Patients Group, Debbie Goldsberry, told city officials she has seen an influx of Oakland residents since the regulations went into effect.

OCBC representatives told city officials that only about 2,000 Oakland residents are registered as patients and caregivers, while the four clubs are permitted to have at least 4,500 customers.

The council's Public Safety Committee will review a report summarizing the implementation of new law at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, in Hearing Room One at City Hall, 1 Frank Ogawa Plaza.

"I'm happy that we haven't had problems," said Councilmember Nancy Nadel (Downtown-West Oakland).

Nadel said she was still concerned about a federal crackdown and called the conflict between the federal prohibition on marijuana and the state's medical marijuana law "the elephant in the room."

Richard Lee, who operates SR71 Coffeeshop on 17th Street, agreed, saying he was more nervous about the club's legal situation than he was before the city issued him one of the coveted permits.

"We're more public and official,"

Lee said. "The war is going our way. It's becoming just a regular business.
Lee said he has urged city officials to allow his coffeeshop to stay open an extra hour, until 9 p.m., to accommodate customers traveling from as far as the San Joaquin Valley to purchase marijuana.

Only one club – California Advocate Relief Exchange – remains in what was Oaksterdam, the area between 17th and 19th streets and Broadway and Telegraph Avenue. The three other clubs are clustered around downtown Oakland.

"It's worked out fine," said Dale Gieringer, executive director of California NORML. "There is a fairly good relationship between city officials and the pot clubs."

In addition to regulating the dispensaries, the regulations reduced the number of plants individuals can have from a maximum of 72 small indoor plants to 12 immature and 6 mature or flowering plants.

Perhaps because of the passage of Measure Z in November, which made private adult use of marijuana the Oakland Police Department's lowest law enforcement priority, that limit has not prompted any complaints, marijuana activists said.

Gieringer and Jones said they would push the city to lift its ban on smoking and other consumption of pot at the clubs and ease the requirement clubs be at least 1,000 feet from other dispensaries, schools, churches and youth facilities.

"It's onerous and overburdensome," Jones said of the on-site consumption ban.

Allowing on-site consumption protects patients from being forced to use the drug on the street, and provides a social outlet for shut-ins and access to other services, such as acupuncture and massage, medical marijuana advocates contend.

Nadel said she favored a lifting of the on-site consumption ban, as long as employees or other patients weren't exposed to secondhand smoke.

De La Fuente said the city's next step would be to establish reporting and operating regulations to ensure the dispensaries are operating lawfully, paying all federal, state and local taxes and maintaining adequate insurance. The regulations also permit the city to audit the dispensaries to ensure they are not "excessively profitable," a provision that has not yet been enforced.

To fund that review, the city would be forced to double the fees charged to the dispensaries, according to the report. Three of the clubs have 500 to 1,000 customers and pay $10,000 annually. The fourth has more than 1,500 customers and pays $20,000 a year.

Lee said he was not opposed to the increased fee.

"Especially because of all the city is doing to protect us from the federal government," Lee said. "I'm very proud to live in Oakland."




Source: Inside Bay Area
Copyright: © 2005 ANG Newspapers
Contact: E-mail Heather MacDonald at hmacdonald@angnewspapers.com.
Website: InsideBayArea.com
 
Oaksterdam.. then I read this an hour later..

Article Last Updated: 04/11/2005 09:52:15 AM

Local cannabis dispensaries have both friends and foes

By Karen Holzmeister, STAFF WRITER


Oakland, CA-- ASHLAND PROPERTY and business owner Ralph Smith stands in front of The Health Center, one of three medical marijuana dispensaries on East 14th Street. Smith says center customers vandalize, urinate on and deal drugs on his properties. (JANE TYSKA - Staff)

ASHLAND – The Health Center appears to represent the best and the worst of medical marijuana dispensaries.
On the positive side, business is thriving, customers praise its service and prices, and a neighboring business manager says center employees have helped her with unruly customers.

On the negative side, other business operators and property owners claim some of the center's customers urinate on and vandalize nearby buildings, clog the area with traffic, and drive away business with what appears to be drug dealing.

Now The Health Center (THC) and six other dispensaries in Ashland and Cherryland are in the spotlight because Alameda County supervisors are looking at ways to regulate and reduce the numbers of marijuana sales centers.

In volume, THC attracts the most customers, an average of 200 to 300 people a day, center operator Jack Norton and county sheriff's Sgt. Kelly Miles agree.

While the sheriff's department is not happy with marijuana sales in its jurisdiction, deputies have issued some citations – and made only a few arrests – to customers since THC opened in January 2004.

The department has received "lots of calls" from businesses and residents about THC clients loitering, drug dealing and urinating, Miles said last week. At least one undercover stakeout resulted in no drug dealing arrests, Miles recalled, and complaints aren't treated as "high priority" by deputies unless a fight is reported or weapons are brandished.

"Jack is receptive to us, and he says he will do what we say," said Miles, who has visited the center with other officers. "The center is the busiest of all the centers, and it goes to show that medical marijuana is a big-time business. I wouldn't be surprised if it brings in $20,000 to $30,000 a day."

Norton wouldn't disclose daily sales figures, but contended that he and the center's 18 employees receive only small salaries and benefits. The money is plowed back into the business, buying quality marijuana from patients who raise small amounts and keeping prices low, Norton added.

One-eighth of an ounce of marijuana can range in price from $45 for high quality to $15 for lesser quality.

THC operates out of a drab building with no identifying sign on East 14th Street. It was the first dispensary on the newly repaved and landscaped street, although two other ones have since opened within a two-block area. It's open for business from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. seven days a week.

During an interview last week, as the pungent odor of marijuana wafted through four waiting and sales rooms cooled by nonstop electric fans, Norton said he was "nervous" about county efforts to reduce the number of dispensaries.

Oakland "messed up" when it decided to allow only four dispensaries, he said. Many of THC's customers come from within a 15- to 20-mile radius, including Oakland.

County regulations don't bother him, explained Norton, who is in his early 20s and started in the medical marijuana business a couple of years ago as a clerk at a Hayward dispensary.

Norton said he and his security guards cooperate with police, patrol the area to prevent loitering and any illegal activities, and sweep the center and neighboring sidewalks. He also sends guards due north to ensure none of his customers are causing problems for insurance agent Ralph Smith's office complex.

Smith, 72, has been at his location since 1971. While he admits problems in the past with transients and drunks, he blames customers of THC and the other dispensaries for urinating on his property, parking in his lot and using it as their own smoking den.

"The concentration of centers, and this particular one, are my problems," said Smith, who describes many of the men he confronts as "huge 20-year-olds."

Smith said his second-degree black belt in karate makes him feel secure in the presence of younger, bigger men. His tenants, including many who signed leases after the street was redeveloped, aren't so sure.

"I'm not a NIMBY (not in my back yard), and we don't need this type of business in a redevelopment transit area with schools nearby," the outspoken businessman explained. "I just don't think it's an honest operation."

Wendy Francis, who manages a cellular phone business across East 14th Street, said the situation with THC "is not always so bad" as other business operators claim.

Last week, an "obnoxious" customer wouldn't stop yelling, Francis said Friday. She called Norton, who came over with a security guard and remained until the unruly customer left. Their presence, she added, was reassuring.

"Reassuring" also describes the service that Doug Nielsen of Tracy receives at the center, he told supervisors at a community meeting last month. Nielsen, who has used a wheelchair after breaking his neck a year and a half ago, said marijuana helps relieve spasms.

"The prices this club charges help get me through the month," he said. "Security accommodates me. They take good care of me in an uncomfortable situation."

But Shi Vawn Hutcherson, whose public storage facility shares a fence with THC, claims she's losing business. Customers, she said to applause from center opponents at the community meeting, are turned away by "drug dealer-type looking people" in "flashy cars."

"They go and pee on my walls," she insisted of THC customers. "I get disrespected when I ask them not to do it."




Source: Inside Bay Area
Copyright: © 2005 ANG Newspapers
Contact: E-mail Karen Holzmeister at <kholzmeister@angnewspapers.com>
Website: InsideBayArea.com
 
Mr. H, did not read news till I had read and posted both these articles. The article that was similar to yours was updated today so to make both related stories work I posted them both. Same paper, different stories, different writers. :peace: Pinch (IMC)
 
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