On April 27 activists confronted San Bernardino County Deputy District Attorney Bruce Brown in the lobby of his office about the foot dragging with the medical cannabis collective ordinance, alleged secret meetings about the ordinance, and continued arrests and prosecutions of medical cannabis patients.
This is a preview of Compassionate Use, a documentary by Eric Katz. It examines the medical cannabis ordinance passed through Los Angeles City Hall in early 2010. It is a study of local city government, business owners, voters, and patients in conflict. Allof the collective operators featured in the preview are members of the Greater Los Angeles Collective Alliance (GLACA), a voluntary association of collectives organized to develop and promote safety and operational guidelines.
From the Sacramento Bee today - ”L.A. looks to rein in rapid spread of marijuana dispensaries”
“The medicinal marijuana flow is coming to an end in the palm-shaded “vapor room” of the Pure Life Alternative Wellness Center. Los Angeles’ restrictive new ordinance to stem the spread of medical marijuana dispensaries in the city will ban on-site pot consumption. It may force the closure of as many as 800 outlets…”
How will the City of Los Angeles pay for enforcement of its new medical cannabis ordinance and the anticipated litigation? That may be a hard question for City Councilmembers to answer in the current economic climate. The city must find over $200 million before July, and next year’s budget shortfall could run as high as $484 million. KCET’s So Cal Connected reports on the financial crisis, pointing out that cuts to the City Attorney’s office may make enforcing the medical cannabis ordinance more difficult.
Councilmembers may want to rethink the new ordinance, which will close most of the city’s medical cannabis collectives. California NORML estimates that collectives generate $1 billion in annual sales, and that does not include licensing fees and jobs created. The medical needs of patients are certainly more important than economic policy. However, cash strapped cities like Los Angeles should think twice about policies that cut off revenue and jobs, while generating costly litigation.
ASA Holds Stakeholder Meetings in MI, NJ; Congressmen Push Truth in Trials Bill; Calif. Appeals Court Nixes Preemption on Dispensaries; California Advocates Concerned Over AG Race; ACTION ALERT: It's Time for Truth! […]
This Senate Joint Resolution urges the federal government to end medical marijuana raids in California and to create a comprehensive federal medical marijuana policy that ensures safe and legal access for any patient that would benefit from it. […]