Marijuana facility planned
Dave Brooks
A medical marijuana facility could be coming to Huntington Beach,
just months after the Huntington Beach City Council passed an
ordinance regulating dispensaries.
A group calling itself the AIDS Collective Herb Center plans to
open a medical marijuana dispensary in an industrial park at 15121
Graham St., according to the group’s permit application with the
Huntington Beach Planning Department.
Little information is available about AIDS Collective Herb Center,
the latest name on the application to build the medical marijuana
facility.
Originally, Nancy Barron, 48, of Huntington Beach filed the
application to open the medical marijuana dispensary, but the name
was changed to the Alternative Caregivers Cooperative. On Monday, the
name was changed again.
The facility will be “serving customers medical marijuana that
have the proper documentation,” the application said, operating in an
unmarked 600-square-foot office with a 1,100-square-foot storage
area. The dispensary will be nondescript and hard to differentiate
from surrounding businesses, according to the application. It will be
open from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. and will be staffed by four employees,
a security guard and an occasional doctor.
The AIDS Collective Herb Center will be leasing the space from
Arden Realty. Company official Chris Nelson did not return several
phone calls for comment.
City Planner Paul Da Veiga said the planning department is
currently reviewing the group’s application, which doesn’t require
approval by the Planning Commission or City Council.
“We’re making sure it meets all the location criteria set in the
code,” Da Veiga said. “If it does, we will go ahead and approve it.”
In March, the City Council enacted an ordinance dealing with
medical marijuana, placing the same zoning restrictions on
dispensaries that were already in place for strip clubs. That means
dispensaries must be located in industrial areas and not come within
500 feet of residential communities, schools or parks, and must be at
least 750 feet away from other pot facilities.
That left only a handful of allowable spaces in Huntington Beach
for dispensaries to operate. The city is currently working on several
rules regulating the operation of medical pot facilities.
“We’re going to try and meet with the people and explain to them
that the city is currently working on several new rules for medical
marijuana dispensaries and we want to ask them to begin following
those rules in advance,” Police Chief Ken Small said.
Most importantly, Small said, the police don’t want people smoking
marijuana at the facility; pot bought at the dispensary should be
used at home, he said. There will also be some requirements involving
proof of prescriptions.
In 1996, state voters approved the first ordinance in the country
to legalize the use of marijuana to treat ailments like glaucoma or
AIDS. The law immediately came under attack from the U.S. Department
of Justice, which argued that the ordinance violated federal
prohibitions on marijuana. Eleven other states have laws allowing the
medical use of marijuana.
A case on the legality of medical marijuana is pending before the
United States Supreme Court. In that case, Raich vs. Ashcroft, the
justices are being asked to decide whether Congress’ ability to
regulate interstate commerce includes the right to restrict patients
from cultivating small plots of medical marijuana for personal use.
If California’s medical pot laws are overturned, the AIDS
Collective Herb Center could be forced to close down.
City Councilman Dave Sullivan said he was concerned that the voter
initiative that legalized marijuana didn’t include language to
regulate the types or amounts of marijuana given out.
“I am concerned any time drugs aren’t distributed by a
pharmacist,” he said. “I don’t know what the qualifications of the
people proposing this facility have.”
City Councilman Don Hansen said the city needs to monitor the
facility. He said he is concerned after hearing reports about
criminal activity occurring in similar clubs in the Bay Area. He said
he has doubts about claims from medical marijuana activists that pot
is widely used for treatment.
“If they’re honest with themselves, they’d admit they’re not
trying to get access for terminally ill patients,” he said. “They’re
just trying to get their buddies easy access to some weed.”
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