DARE to relegalize all drugs - D.A.R.E. TO RELEGALIZE ALL DRUGS dare to re-legalize all drugs end police violence relegalize immediately relegalize all drugs - DARE TO RELEGALIZE ALL DRUGS - D.A.R.E. to re-legalize all drugs

RAD - Re-Legalize ALL Drugs

 

Andrew Myers shuts down Farmer's Markets???

Is Andrew Myers a snitch who is turning in people that are suspected of selling legal medical marijuana to the police because it cuts into the profits of the medical marijuana dispsenaries?

Are the folks at the Arizona Dispensaries Association snitches who are turning in people that are suspected of selling legal medical marijuana to the police, because it cuts into the profits of the medical marijuana dispsenaries?

In this article Andrew Myers and the Arizona Dispensaries Association seem to be attempting to shut down Farmer's Markets because they are cutting into the profits of the medical marijuana dispensaries? I'm not positive about that but I am guessing that is why.

I think Andrew Myers reference to "illegal pot shops" means the farmers markets which allow patient to patient sales of legal medical marijuana.

"The one thing that's the big hurdle for these guys right now is the continued presence of these illegal pot shops," said Andrew Myers, executive director of the Arizona Dispensaries Association, an advocacy group for dispensary owners. [I think Andrew Myers reference to illegal pot shops means the Farmers Markets that allow patient to patients sales of legal medical marijuana]

Myers said the association is working with police and Phoenix officials to close more of the unlicensed dispensaries. [I suspect some people would call Andrew Myers a narc for turning in these people. I wonder if Kathy Inman considers her son in law to be a narc?]

"We're trying to get it from a code-enforcement standpoint." - Andrew Myers [Hmmm ... Andrew Myers calls it "code-enforcement" instead of saying they are narcs turning people into the police for illegally selling medical marijuana]

While the article calls them "illegal pot shops" there seems to be a night and day difference between the way the police, the medical marijuana dispensaries and defense lawyers interpret Prop 203.

The police and medical marijuana dispensaries seem to say anything and everything is illegal, while defense lawyers say that "farmers markets", "compassion clubs" and "patient to patient sales" are legal per Prop 203 or Arizona's Medical Marijuana Act.

Of course the police don't like Prop 203 cutting into their "War on Drugs" which is a jobs program for the police.

And of course the medical marijuana dispensaries don't like these folks cutting into their lucrative medical marijuana market which allows them to sell marijuana at $300 an ounce or $4,800 a pound.

Marijuana that they could grow for the cost of a pound of potatoes or tomatoes if it were grown as a commercial crop.

So I can understand why the police and medical marijuana dispensaries want to keep everything illegal.

Andrew Myers is the son in law of Kathy Inman. For years Kathy Inman ran the Phoenix NORML Chapter.

Oddly Kathy Inman seemed to push "medical marijuana" over simply legalizing marijuana.

Wonder why?

Source

Phoenix medical-marijuana dispensaries clear hurdles

Amy B Wang, The Republic | azcentral.com 10:43 p.m. MST July 12, 2014

Standing behind a long counter in a white lab coat, Lauren Anton is ready for the day, greeting customers as they were buzzed through a door. The sleek lighting, orange-and-chrome color scheme and zebra-print floors suggested a trendy coffee shop or frozen-yogurt bar.

Instead, Anton was busy running her family's business: TruMed, a medical-marijuana dispensary.

TruMed is one of the 10 state-licensed medical-marijuana dispensaries that have cropped up in Phoenix, nearly four years after Arizona voters passed the Medical Marijuana Act.

Many owners say it was a complicated process: They had to overcome strict zoning requirements, hefty legal and registration fees, an oft-wary public perception of medical marijuana and, now, competition from illegal dispensaries.

"It's a difficult industry," said Anton, who faced questions from relatives and friends when she started the process of opening TruMed three years ago, along with her father, brother and friend. Still, as a former oncology nurse who said she saw firsthand the benefits of medical marijuana, Anton and her family proceeded.

Most of Phoenix's state-licensed dispensaries give off a modern, urban-industrial feel. Orange seems to be the accent color of choice. Other similarities include heightened security — bank teller-like windows where patients pick up their marijuana and private guards — and strict hours. Per city regulations, all Phoenix dispensaries must open after 8 a.m. and close by 7 p.m.

At TruMed, the receptionist sits behind bulletproof glass, monitoring 16 video-camera feeds on a flat-screen TV. There is a security guard on site seven days a week.

Though they pre-emptively put heavy security in place, they have had no problems with crime since opening in August, said Bill Anton, Lauren's father and a co-owner of TruMed. He pointed out the customers who had visited in the last half-hour: Two people were in wheelchairs. A few others were middle-age men and women made small talk with the staff, then left after picking up their orders.

"I think the main reason is the people are not the crazy, low-life potheads many people envisioned," Bill Anton said. "We're not getting riffraff ... who just want to get high around here. They have legitimate reasons. They're responsible. They're upscale, professional people."

Voters in 2010 passed the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act to allow people with certain debilitating medical conditions, including chronic pain, cancer and muscle spasms, to use medical marijuana. Since then, the state has approved about 50,000 Arizonans to participate in the program. The overwhelming majority cite severe and chronic pain as a debilitating medical condition.

The state limited one dispensary for each of its 126 "community health analysis areas," regions state health officials had previously used to monitor cancer reports.

Phoenix is home to 15 such areas, and four more straddle the city's boundaries. Within those areas are the 10 state-licensed medical-marijuana dispensaries in Phoenix proper.

From the start, cities and counties across the state imposed strict zoning requirements. By law, medical-marijuana dispensaries in Phoenix must be at least 1,320 feet away from all schools, churches and parks, requirements that quickly whittled down the number of eligible buildings in any health area.

"The biggest challenge early on was certainly the real-estate issue," said Kurt Merschman, an attorney who represents several Valley dispensaries. "You had, first of all, specific zoning in the city of Phoenix where you could and could not locate these dispensaries. And then you oftentimes had neighbors and citizens that probably were irrationally afraid of the use."

Last year, the owners of Urban Greenhouse staked out three suites in a central Phoenix shopping center. Each one had a minor flaw: The south suite fell too close to Brophy College Preparatory by about 10 feet and would have required a variance to open in a school zone. The central and north suites were just far enough away from area schools, but would have required a variance to open in a residential zone.

Still, the suites seemed the best options, and co-owners Brett Carr, William Gibbs and Jeff Cooper went about trying to reassure the neighbors about a potential dispensary opening near them. They set up an open house for all three suites, complete with (marijuana-free) snacks, binders of detailed renderings and a security guard.

Despite their efforts, the city denied their requests for variances because of resident opposition. After scrambling to find a new location, they opened Urban Greenhouse at 27th Avenue and Indian School Road.

Their story is similar for many dispensary owners. Even after overcoming the real-estate hurdle, many owners find the high-overhead medical-marijuana business does not bring in as much green as they had anticipated.

Dispensary owners must pay a $500 annual agent-card fee to the state for each employee. In addition, the actual product is not grown at any dispensaries because Phoenix requires the cultivation take place in an industrial or agricultural zone.

This means owners usually must pay to maintain two separate sites.

"The regulation has been burdensome, and the cost of getting their cultivations open have been more than people anticipated," Merschmann said. "It is a competitive business and there is a limited number of customers in the state, and so all of the dispensaries are fighting for those patients. It's just like any other retail environment where you're competitive on services, on price and location, location, location."

But by far the biggest challenge, owners say, is the continued presence of "compassion clubs," facilities that dispense medical marijuana without a state license.

"The one thing that's the big hurdle for these guys right now is the continued presence of these illegal pot shops," said Andrew Myers, executive director of the Arizona Dispensaries Association, an advocacy group for dispensary owners.

To add to the confusion, some illegal dispensaries have signs that tell customers they must have a state-licensed medical-marijuana patient card. Both legal and illegal dispensaries appear on websites like Leafly.com and Weedmaps.com, which function as Yelp-like review boards for marijuana dispensaries.

"It's confusing by design," Myers said.

To make it more complicated, state law prohibits the Arizona Department of Health Services from releasing any information — names, addresses, operating hours — about dispensaries, even if they are licensed. [Oddly Andrew Myers ran the team that wrote the law which prohibits the Arizona Department of Health Services from releasing any information about dispensaries. So it was probably very intentional that he wants to keep this information secret from the public. Wonder why???] Though the state law names only the health department, many cities have interpreted it to apply to them as well.

In June, Phoenix police shut down Green Thumb Academy, at Seventh Street and Virginia Avenue, one of the dozens of dispensaries operating in the city without a license. [Andrew] Myers said the association is working with police and Phoenix officials to close more of the unlicensed dispensaries.

"They're keeping prices artificially high at the (legal) dispensaries," said Myers, adding that he estimated the city is losing out on $1 million annually on tax revenue in letting unlicensed dispensaries continue to operate. "We're trying to get it from a code-enforcement standpoint."

Initial fears that the state-licensed dispensaries would bring with them sharp upticks in illegal activity seem not to have materialized, according to the Phoenix Police Department.

"As far as robberies, no one's aware of any of those being issues at any of the legal dispensaries," police spokesman Steve Martos said. "The ones that are doing it legally, they have actually invested a lot money in their facilities but also their security and everything else. They really don't want to lose their money.

"If something goes wrong, they're likely to lose a lot of their investment. ... The illegal ones, they're likely the ones creating more of a situation for us."

State-licensed medical-marijuana dispensaries in Phoenix

 


Home

RAD - Re-legalize ALL Drugs