15 Years After Prop. 215, California's A.G. Wonders Where Patients Are Supposed to Get Their Marijuana
Yesterday California Attorney General Kamala Harris urged state legislators to clarify the rules for growing and distributing medical marijuana. In a letter (PDF) to the leaders of the state Assembly and Senate, she notes that California law exempts patients and their primary caregivers from criminal penalties when they "associate…collectively or cooperatively to cultivate marijuana for medical purposes." While "strict constructionists" argue that "any interpretation under which group members are not physically involved in cultivation is too broad," she says, others read this provision "expansively" to allow "large-scale cultivation and transportation of marijuana, memberships in multiple collectives, and the sale of marijuana through dispensaries." Harris says she planned to revise the medical marijuana guidelines (PDF) that her predecessor, Jerry Brown (now the governor), issued in 2008 but concluded that new legislation was necessary to clarify the law. "Without a substantive change to exiting law," she writes, "these irreconcilable interpretations of the law, and the resulting uncertainty for law enforcement and seriously ill patients, will persist."
Harris says the legislature also should address the issue of medical marijuana profits. "Nothing in Proposition 215 or the Medical Marijuana Program Act authorizes any individual or group to cultivate or distribute marijuana for profit," she writes. "Thus, distribution and sales for profit of marijuana—medical or otherwise—are criminal under California law." Brown took a similar position, but I don't see how this follows. Current law may or may not authorize dispensaries, but either way it says nothing about the relationship between a dispensary's revenue and its expenses. In any case, a "nonprofit" dispensary that pays salaries to its operators is hard to distinguish from a for-profit store, as Harris implicitly concedes:
It would be helpful if the Legislature could clarify what it means for a collective or cooperative to operate as a "nonprofit." The issues here are defining the term "profit" and determining what costs are reasonable for a collective or cooperative to incur. This is linked to the issue of what compensation paid by a collective or cooperative to members who perform work for the enterprise is reasonable.
A.P. reports that Harris also sent a letter to California's U.S. attorneys, who recently launched a conspicuous crackdown on dispensaries, informing them of her support for new legislation. "The federal government is ill-equipped to be the sole arbiter of whether an individual or group is acting within the bounds of California's medical marijuana laws when cultivating marijuana for medical purposes," she wrote. Harris has previously criticized the federal crackdown, saying "an overly broad federal enforcement campaign will make it more difficult for legitimate patients to access physician-recommended medicine." Reflecting the Obama administration's inconsistent, shifting, self-contradictory, and deliberately ambiguous policy in this area, the version of Harris' letter to legislators that she posted on her website includes this sentence: "The California-based United States Attorneys have stated (parphrase Cole memo re: hands off approach to those clearly complying with relevant state medical marijuana laws)." Someone in Harris' office clearly was supposed to summarize the Justice Department's position on medical marijuana, but I guess that proved to be too big a challenge. I sympathize.
Meanwhile, Americans for Safe Access and other medical marijuana supporters are backing a ballot initiative that aims to do what Harris says she wants: specify where the marijuana that patients are allowed to use is supposed to come from. A.P. reports that the initiative, which was submitted to California's secretary of state last week for approval prior to signature collection, "would create an appointed Board of Medical Marijuana Enforcement charged with overseeing businesses and nonprofits that grow, distribute, sell and test pot both in its raw state and in finished products like food items." A.P. says "the envisioned regulatory scheme would be financed through application and registration fees, as well as through a 2.5 percent retail sales tax on marijuana and pot-infused products."
Depending on the details, this approach might conflict with an October 4 state appeals court ruling that said Long Beach's dispensary licensing system conflicted with the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA) because it went "beyond decriminalization into authorization." In her letter to legislators, Harris says that decision could still be overturned by the California Supreme Court, but "for now it is binding law" and "may limit the ways in which the State can regulate dispensaries and related activities." Specifically, the decision suggests that the CSA bars state or local governments from issuing dispensary permits, requiring license or registration fees, or mandating testing of marijuana.
[Thanks to Richard Cowan for the tip.]
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Seriously, why does everything have to be codified into law? Why not just let people figure it out on their own?
OK, you're on The List.
honestly, some people have to have everything spelled out in exact detail in order to get things done. They have very little concept of initiative or innovation. They have to be told what to do to get anything done.
honestly, some people have to have everything spelled out in exact detail in order to get things done.
Well, when the consequences of not doing it just so include jail, this is understandable.
I think its a testament to how dead the idea of federalism is that medical mj states continue to let the government trample all over their laws. Or maybe its just that most medical mj states are pussy liberal states like California that otherwise love a strong federal government.
Both.
What's this federalism you speak of? Sounds like a good idea.
Marijuana prohibition is federally unconstitutional per the first amendment. Their prohibition fails to account for religious use and in practice is race based ethnic cleansing. Marijuana is also harmless, it's harm has not been factually demonstrated at all.
I went to my congresswoman, Ellen Tauscher, on the issue after being brutally raped. Congress response to that crime was to immunize military contractors like my rapist for it. It is what they do to whistle blowers. So the federal agents who do it have to be immunized for it; same for the press.
My local police encouraged my rape and actively covered it up. When I confronted my rapist with what the police did, refuse to take my report seriously and falsify the report; he said, "I know, that is what they told me." You see, he had been given permission to rape me in advance.
That is a conspiracy to commit torture.
I am a US citizen, all of this happened in Pleasant Hill, California. I came out of the closet with my Native American religion and what happened to me?
My best friend of over 25 years tortured me and brutally raped me at the behest of the civil authorities. If I didn't have reparative surgery I would have died from the injuries, and I haven't seen our children in five years.
I have been blogging the whole thing in the comments of AlterNet for over eight years. I know the police have been following my story closely from day one. What I want to know is why they go after me for my religion, and ignore or encourage my brutal, life threatening, state sponsored rape.
I think our A.G. should take some small notice of that disparity of justice and hopefully this move is a first step towards that, but as you will often observe in politics, it is all about the money.
Equal treatment under the law has nothing to do with it.
Then you have states like Arizona, where our governor is groveling before the federal government, begging them to undermine the will of the Arizona voters.
Wow, Jacob only just started using alt-text, and he is learning quickly.
I credit Lucy.
LUCY FOR THE WIN!
Yeah first thing I checked was the alt, well done Jacob.
On a side note, I dont think it was intentional all these years. I think he honestly didnt know how to add it and is more focused on writing non-crap to try to please the penut gallery. Then, I envision, one day Lucy walks in, cape flowing behind her and hands on her hips and says "I shall save your article!"
this is my mind.
> would create an appointed Board of
> Medical Marijuana Enforcement
> charged with overseeing businesses
> and nonprofits that grow,
> distribute, sell and test pot both
> in its raw state and in finished
> products like food items.
OMG, do we need another bureaucracy? We're broke, in case you haven't noticed.
> A.P. says "the envisioned
> regulatory scheme would be financed
> through application and
> registration fees, as well as
> through a 2.5 percent retail sales
> tax on marijuana and pot-infused
> products."
I thought sales tax was prohibited on prescriptions, which I suppose includes marijuana prescriptions.
I'm all for legalization of marijuana, but any taxes collected from marijuana operations will just be used to fund more generous raises for lazy public employees, to fund the pension beast.
hummm...kamala...yes or no?
http://en.battlestarwiki.org/wiki/Chamalla
Maybe California should just secede.
They give lots of federal tax money to the federal government and in exchange it gets sent to the deep south and other red states.
California could earn some nice revenue leasing out space to the U.S. Navy, sort of like the Phillipines used to.
Are you saying Californians support slavery?
+1
But in all seriousness, I think most Californians would like to be slaves of the state.
Yep, California voters love their public masters, otherwise known as public servants. They thus wish to enslave taxpayers.
amen to that!
In Virginia the gun laws are written to restrict counties and cities from making their own gun laws (the reasoning is that it would be too confusing to comply with laws that changed from mile to mile). There is a bit or two about felons not owning a gun, but otherwise little is written. The lack of any specifics does not restrict rights; we live in a country where you are free to do whatever you like unless there is a law against it. Shaky Federal drug laws, and poorly worded state guidelines should not be authorization for government police to shut down shops.
Since cannabis dispensaries have to be non-profit, and it is a legal medicine in these states, so should all medicines and pharmacies be non-profit. Being legal, it should also be covered by insurance as are other medicines. But actually it should just be legal for all of its uses.
"Nothing in Proposition 215 or the Medical Marijuana Program Act authorizes any individual or group to sing show tunes in the shower, either." Profit is NOT a crime. Or did I miss our transition to Communism?
wait a sec. the pharma industry make money hand over fist. medical cannabis should not be treated any differently than any other medical industry. period.
there is nothing in either of those bills that PROHIBIT profit...
i can't believe this st-oop-id woman got elected. sigh.
and there is NOTHING about being non-profit that says you can't make money or even pay yourself a nice salary...it only means that excess profit goes back into the organization...