cannabisnews.com: Marijuana Merchant Defies Oakland Order To Close





Marijuana Merchant Defies Oakland Order To Close
Posted by CN Staff on June 02, 2004 at 09:12:31 PT
By Laura Counts, Staff Writers
Source: Oakland Tribune 
Oakland -- Medical marijuana patients who packed into the Dragonfly Holistic Solutions dispensary on Telegraph Avenue on Tuesday seemed unaware the business had been told by the city to shut down. They said they were seeking the most potent medicine in town -- a strain of marijuana called "Barney Purple" -- and didn't like hearing that new city rules will limit them to four city-sanctioned establishments.
"If you enjoy feeling pain-free, this is the place to be," said Sullivan Wallace of Oakland, who says he has a cannabis prescription to fight chronic pain and anxiety. Seven existing dispensaries and one proposed club had applied for the four business permits available. After a series of hearings and several delays, the clubs were notified Friday afternoon whether they made the cut. Those that received licenses will have to pay a $20,000 annual fee. Those that did not were supposed to close Tuesday. Dragonfly did not make it, but owner Ken Estes said he will continue to operate in defiance of city rules until he is arrested.He planned a protest outside the dispensary Tuesday morning, but the only signs of one emerged when the doors to the club opened 15 minutes late. "There is some kind of discrimination going on behind the scenes," Estes said. "Or else the city is out of touch with the patients, because we are the preferred club. When we opened, we forced prices down and brought in higher quality (than the other clubs)." Other club owners, including some who were issued permits, criticized the city's process as arbitrary and complained that three days wasn't enough notice for them or the employees on their payrolls. Still, no one except Estes continued business as usual. One dispensary owner contended there are clubs that did not even apply for a city permit and may try to operate under the radar. "There are some who chose not to pay $300 and sign a confession," said Richard Lee, owner of the Bulldog Cafe, who got a permit for his cafe on Broadway but not for his small SR71 Cafe on 17th Street, according to the city manager's office. Even though Lee received a permit, he contended the process was arbitrary and the four-club limit does not make sense. He plans to move to a larger location to serve the additional customers the closures will bring. "This thing is getting too big for them to say there can only be four clubs. There are too many people who appreciate getting marijuana in a civilized way," said Lee, one of the backers of an initiative now collecting signatures for the November ballot that would all but decriminalize adult use of marijuana in Oakland. Sparky Rose, operator of Compassionate Access on Telegraph -- which also was approved -- said he serves 7,000 patients and is expecting more. He plans to soon move to a larger location nearby. "It was difficult to gauge what was important to the city when we were presenting ourselves. There wasn't a lot of transparency in the process," Rose said, adding that everyone was asked for the same information. "They should have extended the deadline, because a lot of clubs have a lot of employees and a holiday weekend isn't much notice." The city inspected the clubs for code violations, checked for any complaints against them, and asked for information ranging from number of patients to products to prices. In the end, according to a letter from the city's Administrative Hearing Officer Larry Carroll to Estes, the city seemed to put more stock on who had operated the longest. The three clubs issued permits in the "uptown" area had operated between two and five years, though the fourth club on West Grand is a relative newcomer. The Lemon Drop Coffeeshop on Telegraph is one of the more established clubs in the area, nicknamed "Oaksterdam," but it did not receive a permit. Owner Mark Belote said the well-stocked coffee shop will continue to sell its mochas and pastries, gelatos and cakes, but stop pot sales. "I want to do everything legally. I've always been honest with them, so we'll see what happens," he said. "I have an eight-year lease here, so the cafe will stay open." Karry Carr of The Green Door dispensary on Webster Street said he fully expected to get a permit. The building met all code requirements and there were no complaints against the club. It opened last October with the blessing of the city, even stating it was a cannabis dispensary on its business license. The city renewed its license in February. The Green Door is now seeking an injunction to stay open until it can get a court hearing. Its owners contend the application process was fraudulent. Under the new rules, denial of permits cannot be appealed, Carroll said. The final determination was made by City Administrator Deborah Edgerly, who could not be reached for comment Tuesday. As for those that continue to operate in violation, Carroll said, "the city is considering its options." Carroll said he will send final warning letters and may give them a short grace period. However, he noted, "all of those operating without permits are outside of the city's low policing priority with regards to medical marijuana, so the police could take action." The city will review the new rules in six months. Jeff Jones, director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative -- which issues identification cards but does not dispense -- said he has been advising clubs to follow the rules. "The city is our friend, and we are in this together. They are doing what they feel they need to do," Jones said. "I think the best practice is to close down quietly, and we'll spend the next six months lobbying to increase the limit."Note: Others might go underground, as city's new rule gets mixed reaction from consumers, business owners.Complete Title: Medical Marijuana Merchant Defies Oakland Order To Close Source: Oakland Tribune (CA)Author: Laura Counts,  Staff WritersPublished: Wednesday, June 02, 2004 Copyright: 2004 MediaNews Group, Inc. Contact: triblet angnewspapers.com Website: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/Related Articles & Web Sites:OCBChttp://www.rxcbc.org/Medicinal Cannabis Research Linkshttp://freedomtoexhale.com/research.htmCity Cannabis Clubs Forced To Competehttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18667.shtmlPot Clubs Worry City May Impose Regulations http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18291.shtmlOakland Considers Limits on Cannabis Shopshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18166.shtml
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Comment #3 posted by Virgil on June 02, 2004 at 10:06:19 PT
The day is near- the vigils begin
I insist I do not exist. I am but perspective on the treason that rules us. I call the treasonist prohibitionist liars, where I admit to only fiction.Let me lie to you about the vigils that are coming. When they limit the locations the only thing that will come is 24 hour service with a zip drive thru and magnetic striping to make it cashless. One store will begin a 24 hour a day service, and it will mark the vigils that are coming.It will only be the beginning of many vigils. Kind of like a temporary eternal flame to burn until it shifts to mark the passing of the prohibition laws. It seems the ceremony should use a hempoil candle with a spare of the original kept in a safe and secret location so as to keep the original flame alive.I keep thinking of Washington, VA just outside of the big Warshington. I think it an excellent place for a vigil- keep the hempoil flame alive. Of course you could always sell candles except the treason that rules us would say you were creaing weapons that would eventually lead to a torch and pitchfork escalation and that it is necessary to prevent all fire lest we be over run in pitchforks. Peasants cannot have fire.I may go to Washington, NC next week. I wonder if I can get a candle into a lightbulb. I could do some vigil lighting in Washington, NC. Maybe we should aim for just weekend vigils, because we do not have to get carried away with it to have an award for the longest vigil. A twenty-four hour vigil would be good enough. It really will be interesting to see if their is not even an automated service with numbers outside. All they would have to do to win the year round vigil contest with its magnificent prize is to keep a temporary eternal hemp oil flame from an orininal lighting. There is a big thing absent in discussion and that is the hemp insect repellant from hempola. Can somebody get some testimony. That would be a good thing to test and sell at a good hempoil vigil.
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Comment #2 posted by ekim on June 02, 2004 at 10:04:20 PT
is Jerry Brown running for AG of CA
a good thing.
http://www.leap.cc
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Comment #1 posted by FoM on June 02, 2004 at 09:16:20 PT
$20,000 Annual Fee!!!
How will any group be able to afford to pay that without making the price of Cannabis go through the roof?
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