My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
18 Attachments
City of Pleasanton
>
CITY CLERK
>
AGENDA PACKETS
>
2007
>
041707
>
REGULAR MEETING
>
18 Attachments
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/1/2007 12:24:20 PM
Creation date
6/1/2007 12:24:20 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
STAFF REPORTS
DOCUMENT DATE
4/17/2007
DESTRUCT DATE
15 Y
DOCUMENT NO
18 Attachments
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
27
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
DISPENSARIES CAN BE GOOD NEIGHBORS <br />Medical cannabis dispensing collectives are <br />typically positive additions to the neighbor- <br />hoods in which they locate, bringing addition- <br />al customers to neighboring businesses and <br />reducing crime in the immediate area. <br />Like any new business that serves a different <br />customer base than the existing businesses in <br />the area, dispensaries increase the revenue of <br />other businesses in the surrounding area sim- <br />ply because new people are coming to access <br />services, increasing foot traffic past other <br />establishments. In many communities, the <br />opening of a dispensary has helped revitalize <br />an area. While patients tend to opt for dis- <br />pensaries that are close and convenient, par- <br />ticularly since travel can be difficult, many <br />patients will travel to dispensary locations in <br />parts of town they would not otherwise visit. <br />Even if patients are not immediately utilizing <br />the services or purchasing the goods offered <br />by neighboring businesses, they are more like- <br />ly to eventually patronize those businesses <br />because of convenience. <br />ASA's survey of officials whose cities have <br />passed dispensary regulations found that the <br />vast majority of businesses adjoining or near <br />dispensaries had reported no problems associ- <br />ated with a dispensary opening after the <br />implementation of regulation. <br />Kriss Worthington, longtime councilmember <br />in Berkeley, said in support of a dispensary <br />there, "They have been a responsible neigh- <br />bor and vital organization to our diverse com- <br />munity. Since their opening, they have done <br />an outstanding job keeping the building clean, <br />neat, organized and safe. In fact, we have had <br />no calls from neighbors complaining about <br />them, which is a sign of respect from the com- <br />munity. In Berkeley, even average restaurants <br />and stores have complaints from neighbors." <br />Mike Rotkin, fifth term councilmember and <br />former four term mayor in the City of Santa <br />Cruz said about the dispensary that opened <br />there last year, "The immediately neighboring <br />businesses have been uniformly supportive or <br />neutral. There have been no complaints either <br />about establishing it or running it." <br />Mark Keilty, Planning and Building director of <br />Tulare, when asked if the existence of dispen- <br />saries affected local business, said they had <br />"no effect or at least no one has complained." <br />And Dave Turner, mayor of Fort Bragg, noted <br />that before the passage of regulations there <br />were "plenty of complaints from both neigh- <br />boring businesses and concerned citizens," <br />but since then, it is no longer a problem. <br />Public officials understand that, when it <br />comes to dispensaries, they must balance both <br />the humanitarian needs of patients and the <br />concerns of the public, especially those of <br />neighboring residents and business owners. <br />Oakland City councilmember Nancy J. Nadel <br />wrote in an open letter to her fellow col- <br />leagues across the state, "Local government <br />has a responsibility to the medical needs of its <br />people, even when it's not a politically easy <br />choice to make. We have found it possible to <br />build regulations that address the concerns of <br />neighbors, local businesses law enforcement <br />and the general public, while not compromis- <br />ing the needs of the patients themselves. <br />We've found that by working with all inter- <br />ested parities in advance of adopting an ordi- <br />nance while keeping the patients' needs <br />foremost, problems that may seem inevitable <br />never arise." <br />Mike Rotkin of Santa Cruz stated that since <br />Santa Cruz enacted an ordinance for dispen- <br />saryoperations, "Things have calmed down. <br />The police are happy with the ordinance, and <br />that has made things a lot easier. I think the <br />fact that we took the time to give people <br />who wrote us respectful and detailed expla- <br />nations of what we were doing and why <br />made a real difference." <br />For more information, see vww~.AmericansForSafeACCess.org or contact the ASA office at t-888-929-4367 or 510-251-1856. <br />9 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.