Costa Mesa weighs medical pot ban
Alicia Robinson
The Costa Mesa City Council will decide tonight whether to follow a
number of Southern California cities in banning the establishment of
dispensaries that distribute medical marijuana.
Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach have been approached by people
interested in opening medical marijuana facilities. In response,
Newport Beach’s City Council in May voted to put a 45-day moratorium
on such dispensaries while the city figures out whether to allow them
and, if so, under what conditions.
Costa Mesa City Council members now face the same decision. In a
split vote last month, the Planning Commission recommended a
moratorium on marijuana dispensaries. During the moratorium, the city
would create rules under which people can apply for permits to
operate dispensaries.
California law allows the use of marijuana as a medical remedy.
However, officials are still hashing out how that law is affected by
a June 6 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that medical marijuana users can
be prosecuted under federal drug laws.
Planning Commissioner Donn Hall said he proposed that
recommendation because to forbid medical marijuana dispensaries would
be tossing the voters’ will out the window.
“It’s basically telling them: ‘We don’t care what you said. We’re
smarter than you,’” Hall said.
In spite of the Supreme Court ruling, some organizations are
interested in opening medical marijuana facilities, so the council
will have to make a policy decision on whether to allow them, Costa
Mesa City Attorney Kimberly Hall Barlow said.
“We just feel that in light of the inquiries that have been made,
that particular type of use should be addressed in our code,” she
said.
Although three of the five planning commissioners supported
creating rules to govern marijuana dispensaries, it’s not clear
whether the council will agree.
As a Sheriff’s deputy, Mayor Allan Mansoor said he would be
concerned about the increases in crime that other cities with medical
marijuana dispensaries have seen.
“If we’re talking about dispensing drugs, that’s what we have
pharmacies for,” he said. “Let it go through the established route.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.