Los Angeles Closes Loophole
Stunned by the spread of medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles, the City Council moved Tuesday to close a loophole that had encouraged their rapid growth.
The council also rejected a dozen applications from dispensaries that sought permission to operate despite the city’s moratorium and prepared to extend the ban for six months beyond its expiration in September.
When people need access to medical marijuana, are you surprised when the public’s demand meets the growing number of suppliers? Sick people need to have access to their medicine, not have 1 or 2 places miles away that sell their medicine. The number of dispensaries popping up, means that people are buying what they need, their medicine. And legally doing so. Safely, and no longer on the black market, they are paying tax and being good citizens.
The number of stores in the city has tripled, to nearly 600, since the City Council imposed a moratorium on new outlets in 2007.
Why the concern? Are these guys worried about the amount of liquor stores on every corner in their city?
And a council committee unveiled a revamped proposal for a comprehensive ordinance to replace the moratorium.
“We know that time is passing. We’ll close the loopholes, plug these floodgates,” said Councilman Ed Reyes, who leads the committee that oversees medical marijuana.
When the city adopted the moratorium in 2007, it allowed 186 dispensaries to stay open. Now there are 600 or more.
Los Angeles should be worried more about its gang problems and meth labs in stead of medical marijuana dispensary loopholes, and stop trying to stop what is obviously supported by the public demand for medical marijuana. Only legal, card holing marijuana patients can buy from dispensaries, this is safe and effective medicine, not street drugs, stop treating it as if it is. This product is taxed, and while California is doing so terrible financially right now, its best if California would make profit from this natural plant and stop trying to stop people from getting medicine into the hands of sick people, or those who need medical marijuana.
