The Press Enterprise wrote:Lake Elsinore votes to ban medical-marijuana dispensariesCITY COUNCIL: The law will affect only storefront firms, not collectives, members say. 12:46 AM PST on Wednesday, March 1, 2006
By MEGHAN LEWIT /
The Press-EnterpriseLAKE ELSINORE - The City Council on Tuesday approved a ban on medical-marijuana dispensaries, becoming the latest city in the county to jump into the fray over such facilities.
Acting on a recommendation from the city's police chief, council members voted unanimously in favor of an ordinance that prohibits the establishment of dispensaries in the city. However, the council clarified that the measure will not apply to collectives, which provide the drug to its members and are specifically permitted by state law.
The ordinance states that federal law prohibiting the distribution and use of marijuana precludes the opening of dispensaries within the city. The issue has been raised in several other Inland cities, including Temecula, Moreno Valley and Palm Desert, which all have enacted temporary bans on dispensaries while city officials draft policies to regulate the facilities. There are currently no dispensaries in Lake Elsinore.
Medical marijuana advocates in attendance said that the ordinance as originally written was too broad and could restrict the collectives and cooperatives. While dispensaries are typically storefront businesses that operate for profit, collectives are groups of people who work together to provide medical marijuana to contributing members, said Douglas Lanphere, a medical marijuana advocate in Riverside County.
Lake Elsinore resident Stephen Roper said he is living with AIDS and is a medical marijuana patient.
"This is life sustaining," he said, addressing the council. "This is not about the law, this is about living."
While federal law prohibits the sale or use of marijuana, California permits using the drug for medical purposes.
Councilman Bob Schissner said he supported the ordinance with the proposed changes.
"I don't feel like I want to speak for or against the use of medical marijuana," he said. "In order to be consistent ... I have no bad feeling for making the changes that have been suggested."
In 1996, California voters approved the Compassionate Use Act that allows patients with a physician's recommendation to transport and use marijuana. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that patients in states that allow medical marijuana could still be prosecuted for violating federal drug laws.
Lake Elsinore Police Chief Louis Fetherolf said the ordinance will protect the city from getting mired in the conflict between state and federal laws.
"It takes us out of the unenviable position of having to enforce one (law) that is in violation of another," he said.
Reach Meghan Lewit at (951) 375-3727 or
mlewit@PE.com