Pubdate: Wed, 09 May 2012 Source: Times-Herald, The (Vallejo, CA) Copyright: 2012 The Times-Herald Contact: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/993 Author: James D. Davis CLOSING THE MARIJUANA CLINICS: ANOTHER SAD VALLEJO STORY The closing of the marijuana clinics will be another of those unbelievable Vallejo stories: The town turned down a Walmart because it wasn't classy enough for the city. It closed down the only grocery store downtown, with a condition that it never open again, resulting in no grocery store for the thousands of people downtown (the city planners turned the site into a church). The school district was taken over by the state. The city went bankrupt, and it has burglaries, rapes, shootings, murders, and robberies throughout neighborhoods lined with churches. Now the Vallejo story will be this: "Yeah, back around 2010, they had a chief who decided to bust all the clinics, close them all down. It was like a religious thing, backed up by the religious community and the religious mayor. Lives were destroyed. Taxes were lost. The chief and his movement created 20 new vacant spaces overnight. But, according to them, they ended the marijuana traffic in the city (smiles). "The city council and city manager? They were complicit, while duplicitous, simultaneously taking action that seemed to favor regulating the clinics and taxing them, while also encouraging the chief to mount an offensive with guns and storm troopers." There are reasons for the council members and city manager to be wary of regulating these clinics. Even the rational members of the group are reluctant to push regulation. The federal government (your president, through his U.S. attorneys) has actually threatened city officials, like ours, with ruination if they pass any laws to regulate marijuana. The act of regulating will be considered aiding and abetting a criminal enterprise in violation of federal law, resulting in prison and forfeiture of all assets and a felony record. Five years ago I viewed such threats as vacuous and I was sure an intelligent president would not go down that road. I was wrong. U.S. attorneys, looking to make names for themselves as crime fighters, are taking action against marijuana clinics, their owners and operators, and city officials who try to regulate them. Enacting a rule like "only 1-pound of dried buds per patient," could amount to a violation of federal law, in the warped minds of these federal crime-fighters, even though it is clearly legal under California law (except in the mind of our chief). All counties in California are operating clinics under guidelines put out by the California Attorney General. Will the U.S. attorney prosecute Kamala Harris? Who are these people meddling in our affairs? We had a good clinic (Greenwell) with a responsible owner (Matt Shotwell). We could have limited the number of clinics with zoning rules and used Matt's operation as a model for how to structure clinics and make sure they are honest operations contributing to our economy. No one even mentions the legitimate patients; everyone is focused on the smokers taking advantage. Suppose it is 20 percent legitimate patients and 80 percent illegitimate; that means thousands of bona fide patients are getting left out. Matt is disgusted. He tried to run a good business. He will never work with the city again. I remember a developer with a contract for developing downtown, saying a few years ago, as he left in disgust, "I will NEVER come back to Vallejo." Something is wrong here. James D. Davis Vallejo - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom