Thursday, April 24, 2008

Steve Francis attends Hope Unlimited meeting



Candidate for mayor Steve Francis was in attendance at last night's Hope Unlimited meeting. He pledged to re-establish the dialog between police and medical marijuana patients if elected. The previous council under mayor Murphy voted to accept guidelines established by the city's medical marijuana task force. This work has stalled under mayor Sanders.


FOX News 6 Video - Steve Francis meeting patients at the Hope meeting while responding to Mayor Sanders telling him "go f*ck yourself" on 4/20:




Last night Steve and Gayle Francis took time out of their busy schedule to speak with members of Hope Unlimited, a local support group for medical cannabis patients. Gayle spoke to the group about her work in healthcare and her website www.KeepComingBack.com, a place for those in recovery to connect and share stories. Steve spoke to the group about how his legislative and business experience in the Southwest led him to his candidacy for mayor of San Diego.


After listening intently to his outline for change at City Hall, Hope Unlimited founder Aaron Klein opened the floor for questions. One Hope member questioned why medical cannabis dispensaries are free to operate and generate sales tax revenue in LA and Orange counties while San Diego uses police resources to shut down local dispensaries and destroy any potential revenue? Mr. Francis did not have an immediate answer to this question, but expressed an interest in learning more.


He was also asked for his stance on the current case “San Diego County et al vs. San Diego NORML et al.” The suit began when San Diego County sued the State refusing to implement the California Department of Health Services Card Registry Program. The County lost their case and filed an appeal in February of 2007, which is ongoing. Mr. Francis stated it was “up to government to figure it out” and agreed that it placed the patients in a difficult position to have “two entities going at each other.”


One Hope member questioned why San Diego law enforcement and patients are being forced to operate in this legal grey zone, “Why are Sheriff’s Deputies able to enter a residence with weapons drawn to confiscate medical cannabis without charges being laid?” he asked. Mr. Francis agreed that the current situation “creates confusion” and “creates distress”. He continued, saying “it shouldn’t be this way” and if elected pledged “to have the police chief speak with the group” to re-establish the dialog on medical cannabis in San Diego.


History of Medical Marijuana in San Diego

In May 2001 the City Council established an Implementation Task Force comprised of patients, police and city officials. The group was tasked with creating guidelines for acceptable use of medical cannabis in San Diego. Those guidelines were created and two years later on September 29th 2003 the guidelines came before the council for a vote on whether to incorporate them into the municipal code. The vote was 6 to 3 with council members Peters, Frye, Atkins, Zucchet, Lewis, & Inzunza voting in favor, and council members Madaffer, Maienschein, and then Mayor Murphy voting in opposition.


Two weeks later, California Senate Bill 420 was signed into law. This bill required the State Department of Health Services to establish and maintain an identification card program for qualified medical cannabis patients. The cards were to be issued through County Health Departments. Soon after, medical cannabis dispensaries began to open in San Diego. However, the city task force only provided guidelines for small co-operative growing operations, it did not endorse dispensaries.


For the next two years numerous dispensaries operated in San Diego. It became clear there was a need to address neighborhood issues related to their operation. These are the kinds of discussions that are ongoing now in counties like LA and Orange where hundreds of dispensaries are currently operating. But here that discussion stopped and San Diego County got something different. In November of 2005 Jerry Sanders became the new mayor of San Diego. The new mayor and the County abandoned discussion.


On December 12th 2005 federal DEA agents worked with local law enforcement to raid local dispensaries at gunpoint. Officials claimed victory when their operation closed the 13 dispensaries and people were forced to drive north to obtain their medicine. This operation was estimated to have had a fiscal impact of 1.2 million dollars according to Americans for Safe Access (ASA), a group currently spearheading advances in medical cannabis law.


In January of 2006 the County voted in a 3-2 decision to file suit against the State seeking to overturn the 10-year-old medical cannabis law. ASA claimed in 2006 that council president Peters was actively trying to keep council members from placing the issue on the City Council docket at Sander’s behest. ASA then called Mayor Sanders “the biggest obstacle to creating regulations in San Diego”. The mayor is blocking a discussion that has medical cannabis patients in San Diego stuck in limbo.


Many Hope members outlined their request for State ID cards. While the City did authorize the Medicinal Cannabis Voluntary Verification Card Program in February of 2002, the system has proven to be flawed. Klein, the group founder, described the problems faced by law enforcement officers in the field and the “20,000 card holders in the county.” “Local law enforcement agencies are not uniform in their treatment of patients” said Klein, “some officers call to verify the cards are valid other mock the card as being worthless.”


Hope member, Donna Christie, talked about her introduction to medical cannabis while undergoing interferon treatment for chemotherapy. After experiencing the benefits it provided her, she began a caregiver service to assist other patients dealing with serious problems. She provides baked goods for patients who cannot or choose not to inhale their medicine. She offered to introduce Gayle Francis to some of her patients so she can witness how many truly benefit from safe access to medical cannabis.


FOX 6 News and KUSI camera crews were in attendance to film Mr. Francis’ response to being told “go f_ck yourself” by Mayor Sanders on Sunday 4/20 during Earth Day at Balboa Park. Members of the Hope group feel the response from the Mayor on their issue has been similar. Francis, speaking to the group promised “not to give you the cold shoulder”. Klein thanked Mr. Francis for “inspiring him” and “bringing hope to the group”.

Steve Francis for Mayor

_____________________________
April 24th 2008

Mayoral Candidate Floyd Morrow responds to the medical marijuana issue:

To: Hope Unlimited

"I support your cause, it not only is justice from a legalistic viewpoint, but just from a health perspective of equal treatment for equal remedies. Our health care system is the most expensive in the world, but not even in the top twenty in terms of providing adequate health care service."

Very truly yours, Floyd L. Morrow, Floyd Morrow for Mayor

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Medical Marijuana Voting Guide for City Attorney

The June 3rd election for San Diego City Attorney is the one of the most contentious in years. Five candidates, Mike Aguirre, Amy Lepine, Jan Goldsmith, Brian Maienschein, and Scott Peters are vying for the seat. If no one candidate wins 50% of the vote, the top two vote getters will run against each other in a November run-off election. Hope Unlimited has been seeking to gather public opinions from the candidates on medical marijuana. The following voter guide has been prepared based on the response to our inquires and research of past medical marijuana legislation.

We will update as we hear new information from the candidates.

Grading the City Attorney candidates on medicinal marijuana

Jan Goldsmith B+

-Superior Court Judge, endorsed by Republican party, former State Assemblyman for North County

Goldsmith was a State Assemblyman when Proposition 215 came before California voters in 1995. Prop 215 became Bill 1529 when it reached Assembly. It passed committee by a vote of 5 to 2. The bill then went before the full assembly where it narrowly passed 41 to 30. Goldsmith was one of the 41 who voted in favor of implementing prop 215 guidelines. However, he has been labeled an anti-drug Republican, and when bill 1529 came back to the Assembly for a second vote Goldsmith was absent or abstained.


Scott Peters B-

- Represents District 1 and is currently president on City Council, Democrat, attorney

Peters sat on the San Diego City Council in 2003 when recommendations from San Diego's Medical Cannabis Task Force came up for vote. The measure authorizing medical patients to possess a pound of dried cannabis or 24 plants was a milestone in San Diego. It passed 6 to 3, Peters was one of the 6 voting in favor of adopting local medical marijuana guidelines. More recently in 2006 he was criticized by San Diego Americans for Safe Access (ASA) for obstructing them in getting a resolution docketed for City Council.


Mike Aguirre F

- Current city attorney, claims office should be used to "serve the public interest", Democrat

Aguirre has never been in a position to put himself on the record with a yes or no vote on a medical marijuana initiative. Hope Unlimited has contacted him repeatedly to give him a chance to state his views on medical marijuana but neither his campaign or his city office have responded. Judging from his recent attempt to shutdown "smoke shops" shows his motivations. Publicly he told City Beat he was going after crack and meth pipes. The actual letter sent out to smoke shops had the following passages underlined and asterisked: "bongs", "otherwise introducing into the body a controlled substance", & "marijuana, ... , hashhish, & hashhish oil". Aguirre seems to have been caught in a lie on this one.


Brian Maienschein F

- Represents District 5 on City Council, Republican, attorney


Maienschein also sat on San Diego City Council for the 2003 vote. He was one of 3 who voted against implementing medical marijuana guidelines. When this item was voted on it took about 7 hours to hear everyone who wanted to speak on the issue. Many passionate cases were made for individual's medical need of marijuana. Maienschein made a point at the time to speak out against the guidelines.

Amy Lepine - ?

- Former Deputy City Attorney under Aguirre, quit and filed suit claiming sexism



Has no taken no public stance on the issue to the best of our knowledge.




Friday, April 04, 2008

Medical Cannabis Generates More than $100 Million in Sales Tax

On Tuesday, March 18, medical cannabis advocates and dispensary operators from around California went to the state capital to testify about the sales tax medical cannabis generates. The group urged the Board of Equalization (BOE) to help protect an important source of revenue for the state—$100 million in sales tax collected annually by medical marijuana dispensaries.

The BOE testimonyThe patients, advocates, and operators who testified.

ASA's Chief of Staff Rebecca Saltzman testified first. She told the BOE that the tax revenue the state receives from licensed medical cannabis dispensaries is in danger, due to increased federal interference in the state medical marijuana program.

"The sales tax collected by medical marijuana dispensaries in one year could fund the construction of two large schools or 2,000 elementary and high school teachers," said ASA Chief of Staff Rebecca Saltzman. "By robbing California of this much needed revenue, the federal government is not only harming thousands of patients that rely on this medicine, it is also impeding the state's ability to fund critical aspects of its infrastructure."

Others who testified included Dale Geiringer, Ph.D., the head of California NORML, who outlined the millions of dollars of tax revenue dispensaries produce for the BOE, and several dispensary operators and former operators from Berkeley, Los Angeles, Santa Rosa, San Francisco, Sacramento and Santa Cruz, who all testified to their problems with the DEA.

Among those dispensary operators was Lisa Sawoya, the tax-paying former director of Hollywood Compassionate Care in Los Angeles, who was forced to close her dispensary because the DEA intimidated her landlord by threatening to seize the property. Her collective still suffered a raid at the hands of the DEA, even though her landlord had notified the DEA that the dispensary was closing in a matter of days.

Bill Pearce, former director of River City Patients' Center in Sacramento, described the $700,000 he had paid to the BOE over the past three years, as well as a quarter of a million to the IRS and Franchise Tax Board. The DEA shut him down in September.

All those testifying urged the BOE to do everything possible to help protect safe access and state tax revenues. ASA's Rebecca Saltzman also pointed out that the DEA would soon face oversight hearings before Congress on their tactics, and State Senator Carole Migden is introducing a resolution calling for an end to federal interference and urging Congress and the President to establish policy consistent with the compassionate use laws of California.

In 2007 alone, the DEA raided more than 50 medical marijuana providers, and they embarked on a new strategy, sending more than 300 letters to landlords of dispensaries, threatening property owners with criminal prosecution and asset forfeiture.

Read more in Rebecca Saltzman's report on the hearing on ASA's blog. Also, see the ASA Fact Sheet on sales tax on the website here.