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S. Tahoe officials jittery about legalities of medical pot


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By Kathryn Reed

Cities across California are fearful of what a medical marijuana decision out of Long Beach will mean to them as well as what the feds may do.

South Lake Tahoe and Sacramento’s city councils on Tuesday wrestled with what to do with their respective ordinances. In predictable fashion, South Lake Tahoe couldn’t make a decision. Sacramento voted to essentially put its 38 dispensaries on hold – with their permit application deadlines extended seven months.

potAfter nearly three-dozen people spoke to the issue Nov. 15, the South Tahoe council voted to continue the meeting to Nov. 29 at 5pm.

The city has three dispensaries that are allowed under an ordinance that was voted on in September. A separate ordinance regulates growing marijuana in residential areas.

One of the options discussed was similar to what Sacramento decided to do. Other alternatives include banning dispensaries or doing nothing – as in keeping the status quo. There is also the Berkeley method that essentially lets the collectives operate under a permit and not an ordinance.

City Attorney Patrick Enright was tasked with finding out more about what Berkeley does.

What many of the people at the Tuesday meeting didn’t seem to get was the council has no desire to deny people medical marijuana. What they want to avoid is literally or figuratively having the feds come in with guns drawn.

The federal government in the past has used money as a way to force compliance – just look at how the states all have 21 as the legal drinking age instead of 18 and how speed limits are 65mph. The threat of federal dollars going away brought states to their knees.

South Tahoe would also like to avoid being sued. After all, as was pointed out by Councilwoman Claire Fortier, the Long Beach case was a result of the dispensaries not selected in a lottery system suing the city.

The Pack vs. Long Beach decision by a state appellate court says that city’s medical marijuana ordinance violates federal law. The feds believe marijuana is an illegal drug.

A petition has been filed with the state Supreme Court. The court has until mid-January to decide if it will take up the case; then it could be another year before it does. An application has also been filed to have the Long Beach case de-published. This would mean the ruling would only pertain to Long Beach and nowhere else in California.

Michael Stallings, one of the few people who actually spoke to the issue at hand, was articulate as he expressed his desire to suspend permitting of dispensaries – essentially the route Sacramento took.

“The responsible thing to do is allow the state Supreme Court to rule,” Stallings said.

Kashon Kohler said, “Be bold and continue to stand up for your community. The country is learning from what is going on in Tahoe.”

Even though states are supposed to be able to govern themselves – and 17 have legalized medical marijuana – the Obama administration says otherwise. It is cracking down on weed as medicine. No firm number is out there as to how many collectives exist in California because not all are permitted by a city or county. Estimates range from 500 to 2,500.

South Tahoe Councilman Bruce Grego said he’s heard of two in the city limits that are operating beyond the three that are legally allowed.

Californians approved Proposition 215 in 1996. This allowed marijuana for medicinal purposes. Some have said the medical marijuana industry is a $1.5 billion business in California.

Not all cities are running from the feds. The Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana is the oldest licensed dispensary in the state, having started 14 years ago. The Fairfax Town Council on Nov. 4 voted to keep the $1 million-a-year business operational despite the threat by the feds to prosecute the landlord.

In other action the council:

• Put off a decision and discussion about funding the economic analysis of the South Shore Vision until the Dec. 13 meeting.

• Agreed to go forward with altering business license fees. The idea is the higher grossing businesses would pay more, while the smaller businesses would pay less. Councilman Tom Davis is against having automatic increases tied to the Consumer Price Index. It was left that the CPI would not be part of the new funding structure. However, that would ultimately mean the city would be collecting less from businesses than it does now because the current fee is tied to the CPI. No one on the council or staff brought the funny math to light. The council will have the business tax as a formal agenda item to approve in January, with the projected date for voters to cast a ballot being in June.

• Heard from Bill Crawford questioning why Measure S (now Measure R) bonds might become taxable. He also said the city should take over operation of the recreation bond instead continuing to have John Upton be the sole paid staff member.

• Sided with Michael McKinney in allowing him to be a BlueGo bus driver.

• Agreed to spend an extra $6,000 on the annual survey that goes out in December to be published in Spanish. This brings the cost to $16,000. Davis voted against it. Councilwoman Fortier had left for the TRPA meeting by this time.

• Was adamant in not wanting to increase fees for vacation rental owners. They were disappointed Finance Director Christine Vuletich didn’t bring forward ways to increase revenue. The fees are only supposed to cover the cost of doing business, not be a revenue generator. She was directed to bring back in more detail the idea of hiring a company that would be paid a percentage of taxes currently not being collected or fees not being collected.

• Wants to implement a utility cut fee so the entity mucking them up the roads would fix them.

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Comments

Comments (16)
  1. Steve Kubby says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    The SLT Cultivation Ordinance is the worst in the state. No other jurisdiction has as punitive and illegal a measure as SLT. No other ordinance, anywhere in California is as anti-medical marijuana, ill-concieved and harmful to patients. It is only a matter of time, before the city and council members will be facing civil and criminal complaints.

  2. DAVID DEWITT says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    The big scam MEDICAL MARIJUANA it is a reminder of proabition where people will find a way to get what they want the solution make it legal and tax it.

  3. Frank says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    The city council needs to grow a pair and stop being pushed around by these people who want legal dope, stop being confused by the few that are sick. So there’s a few sick people who need other drugs too that doesn’t mean we want it sold on every street corner. Or are they going to wait to be sued and waste our few resources on another lawsuit ?

    And Kubby you have zero cred. You led the charge to get an ordinance, you pushed the debate on this issue into front and center and ran on the ordinance as your only platform. You have no cred whatsoever.

  4. Mick says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    I think the City’s proposal of a “utility cut fee” should be explored more. I understand that those who tear up the roads by updating infrastructure should repair them, but right now they require the utility to practically re-pave the entire street – not just where the cut was made. I guess its a easy way for the City to get other people to pay for the poor conditions of the roads although the disrepair can mostly be attributed to City snow plows. Of course, those “other people” that I mention who will be paying for it will be you and I in the form of rate increases.

  5. Bob says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    I’d bust the 2 illegal ops, drop the ordinance for now and follow Berkeley. I don’t want my tax dollars being tied up in a lawsuit. Kubby you’re a loser and only care about yourself and a few potheads.

  6. 4-mer usmc says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    Frank and Bob:

    Ditto on Kubby.

  7. Ex Bonanza Resident says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    I can’t believe they allowed 3 pot clubs in Tahoe. Really don’t think there are that many people that are truly sick that are seeking it out. Judging by what I’ve seen, it’s mostly people that got a dishonest money hungry MD to issue them a B.S. Medicinal Pot Card. I’m sick of smelling pot growing in my neighborhood. There has to be a better way to get pot to those that truly need it.

  8. bobo says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    And all of you people are so perfect right! Pot is not sold on every street corner, just an example of how your prejudice and ridiculous exagerations are poisening our community. What does the fact that you smell pot on your street have to do with the collectives being in operation? We have a liquer store and bar on every corner nobody is complaining about that. Its really not your ability to look at people and decipher if pot helps them or not. How many of you have been adversly affected by a mmj patient. Is it not the residential grows that should be put into question. Let the collectives remain, ban all residential grows, allow a few commercial/indusrial area grows to keep up with LOCAL patient’s needs and stop persecuting the sick!
    And Steve kubby has done nothing but use Tahoe as a political stage for his own agenda. Go back to Canada kubby!

  9. sunriser2 says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    Never understood why Clinton and Obama didn’t apply more pressure to legalize pot.

    Could it be the public sector unions??

    Cops, jailers, probation officers, prosecutors, public defenders, drug testing technicians, judges, court reporters, rehabilitation counselors..etc

  10. nature bats last says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    Get the growers out of our neighborhoods!

  11. Bob says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    Steve – since you have so much time, and your head is obviously in the clouds from all that weed smoking – why don’t you do something positive and find out why the gov’t is spraying all those chemtrails across the sky this morning?

  12. I' m a prisoner caught in a cross fire says - Posted: November 16, 2011

    Hey Mack fishing was great today!Grab a pole get some fresh air!
    PEOPLE COMPLAIN WHEN I’M SMOKING MACK ON THE SMOKER WITH ALMOND WOOD,NEXT WEEK IT BE TURKEY.JESUS !

    THERE’S PLENTY ROOM,FRESH AIR, FOR ALL.

    SO WHENS HEAVENLY GOING TO OPEN A DOOBIE BAR?
    “THAT BE SOMETHING OF A NATIONAL DRAW”.
    NO KIDDING.
    FOLDING MONEY WITH NO DOUBT ABOUT IT.
    5 DOLLAR CANDY BARS BE JUMPING OF THE SHELVES.Face rats all be grinning,Yah-hoo-oo, see you at the bottom.

    I LIKE TO KNOW THE CRIME DATA, HAS CRIME GONE UP WITH POT USE, OR HAS IT COME DOWN WITH THESE OPEN DOOR BUD JOINTS?
    Can one you shed some light on the figures here in the city limits of SLT?
    I’ve noticed in my neighborhood over the last couple years, it’s got pretty quite ,no police activity, very little crime to speak of.

    Another thing I’ve noticed that people with pill scripts at some the bar- grills, around town, trying to sell their medication so they can pay their Barton Medical bills,now that I think is a shame and a real crime.

  13. Kathy says - Posted: November 17, 2011

    I think the stores for the pot for the medical patience should stay open, What harm have they done? Better then drinking and bars on every corner ,I voted yes and I am glad I did like a million others did , thats why they are open .

  14. andy says - Posted: December 1, 2011

    i think people should back off the residential grows, if people want to grow their own pot let em, they’er not hurting any one. Un like all the bars liquor store and clubs that love to over pour the community. south lake tahoe had one of the highest DUI rates in the nation. to me it seems the real issue is the money, some people are makeing a few bucks helping people feel better and the feds arent getting their cut. also this last year the penilty and fines were raised for DUIs so you know they’er not trying to shut down a gold mine. its all a money game and its just pot, not meth or hard alcahol/ poison

  15. chicken joe says - Posted: December 1, 2011

    bob- whats so positive about figuring out whats in a chem trail, mabey you should blaze a phatty and find out whats in the clouds yourself

  16. the conservation robot says - Posted: December 1, 2011

    There is no such this as ‘chem trails’. Those are con trails. They happen when jets fly through a layer of cold air that is unstable enough to allow the resulting ice crystals to form a cloud that lingers. And often causes more ice crystals to form.
    Go get a pair of binoculars and look at the plane you think is from the government. I bet you see it is from a private US carrier.