Have City Health Dept.
Distribute Medical Marijuana If Clubs Close -- San Francisco D.A. Hallinan
(Ed. note: If the city of San Francisco starts
distributing medical marijuana, this will put it on a collision course with both the
Federal government and gubernatorial candidate and alleged Attorney General Dan Lungren.
It will also be difficult to vilify a citys health department.)
See Four
California Mayors Urge Clinton To Spare Buyers Clubs -- Major Political
Confrontation!From the San Francisco Examiner
March 15, 1998
By Zachary Coile Of The Examiner Staff
letters@examiner.com
http://www.sfgate.com/
HALLINAN: LET THE CITY PASS OUT POT IF CLUBS CLOSE
If the federal government shuts down Californias marijuana
clubs, city health workers could be called On to distribute the drug to patients who need
it, San Francisco District Attorney Terence Hallinan said Saturday.
The former city supervisor and outspoken backer of medical marijuana made the
suggestion in court papers he plans to file Monday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco
in an effort to keep open the citys pot clubs-under siege by the courts and the U.S.
Justice Department.
Hallinan admits the idea is still in the working stages and needs more thorough review
by the health department and other city agencies.
Mitchell Katz, director of the San Francisco Health Department, said the proposal
remains "a hypothetical," but he expressed support for the concept.
"What youre hearing is that there is an absolute
commitment to vigorously make sure marijuana is available to those who need it to
alleviate their sickness," Katz said.
"If the pot clubs are forced to close, The City would look at a variety of
alternatives." he said. Its an energetic and courageous city. I think we
will find a way."
The proposal would be a last ditch way to preserve the intent of Proposition 215, the
initiative passed by state voters in 1996 that legalized the cultivation and distribution
of marijuana for seriously ill patients, he said.
MUNICIPAL MAVERICK
The proposal, which would have to be approved by the Board of
Supervisors, could make San Francisco the first city in the world actively to provide
marijuana to its citizens and would continue The Citys reputation as a municipal
maverick and testing ground for progressive ideas.
"I would prefer that these clubs do it, but were throwing out alternatives
in light of what the courts appear to be saying and the lack of clarity in the proposition
itself," Hallinan said. Were struggling to make this resource available
to ill people."
Katz said the health department would wait for the courts to decide the fate of the pot
clubs before launching a study of the costs and logistics of setting up a city-run
marijuana operation.
Despite several recent court rulings, the status of the clubs remains up in the air.
In December, the 1st District Court of Appeal ruled against buyers clubs,
saying a commercial outfit cannot furnish pot to the sick by claiming to be a
patients "primary caregiver."
Prop. 215 allows patients or their primary caregivers to cultivate or possess marijuana
for medicinal use by the patient upon a doctors recommendation.
A state Supreme Court ruling on Feb. 25 let the appellate,court ruling stand.
IGNORED COURT ORDER
But the Cannabis Cultivators Club of San Francisco has largely ignored a Superior Court
order to block it from selling or giving away marijuana at the clubs offices.
Despite the Supreme Courts decision, founder Dennis Peron said his position as
caregiver to the clubs 8,000 customers puts him within the confines of the law.
State and local law enforcement officials have not challenged him.
Hallinan will file his friend-of-the-court brief to block a
separate effort by the Justice Department to shut down the Cannabis Cultivators Club and
five other clubs in Marin County, Oakland, Santa Cruz and Ukiah. U.S. Attorney Michael
Yamaguchi moved to close the collectives in January, saying they violated the federal
Controlled Substances Act.
A court hearing in the case is scheduled for March 24.
In the brief, Hallinan argues that closing pot clubs would force
patients with AIDS, cancer and other serious illnesses to seek marijuana on the street, at
significantly higher prices.
What is now a reasonably well controlled, safe distribution system and one that
has generally been characterized by cooperation with city officials - will instead devolve
into a completely unregulated, and unregulatable, public nuisance," he wrote.
CITY MIGHT DISTRIBUTE POT
If the clubs were outlawed, The City might have to distribute marijuana itself in light
of the "ill effects of forcing patients to purchase medical marijuana on the
street," he wrote.
A spokesman in Attorney General Dan Lungrens office, which has steadfastly
opposed pot clubs said the courts would likely have to determine if city health worker
could distribute marijuana.
"I cant say for certain whether a health care worker
(for The City) is a primary caregiver or not," said spokesman Matt Ross.
John Hudson, co-director of the now-defunct Flower Therapy, San Francisco pot club that
was one of the targets of the federal case, said he backs the move to, make medical
marijuana a government responsibility.
"Its because its a health issue thats
why," Hudson said. "Let take it out of the hands of law enforcement and
put it into the hands of health officials, where people want it."
Board of Supervisors President Barbara Kaufinan said she had not heard Hallinans
suggestion, but said the board would seriously consider it if pot clubs in the area were
closed down.
"The board is very supportive o the public being able to have access to the
medical use of marijuana, Kaufman said. "If the district attorney is proposing
something,there is some kind of legislation and if the health department was willing to go
along with it, I think would have the boards support."