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Ordinance 2017-491
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Ordinance 2017-491
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Last modified
7/24/2017 11:53:46 AM
Creation date
2/2/2017 11:23:13 AM
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Ordinance Number
2017-491
Date (mm/dd/yyyy)
01/19/2017
Description
Moratorium on Medical Marijuana Dispensing Org & Ctrs for 180 Days.
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Marihuana moratoriums Vtt — nut not for long I Lonoriai - gun -3entinei <br />ra5c4UiJ <br />Given the unknowns, the moratoriums are understandable. For while voters agreed to give residents <br />with certain medical ailments a constitutional right to medical pot, the Legislature has yet to write the <br />implementing language that clarifies how the process will work, exactly. <br />After all, no one wants a dispensary next door to a school or church, or congregated in a single <br />neighborhood, changing its character. We've also yet to learn whether legislators will outlaw <br />packaging that looks like candy or overwrite another law that prohibits anyone from smoking <br />marijuana, medical or otherwise. <br />Coral Springs Vice Mayor Dan Daley, who supported the ballot effort, said city leaders "are taking a <br />lot of flak" about their moratorium. "People are asking, 'Why didn't you prepareT That's not the <br />issue. We're waiting to see what the state does." <br />Absent a moratorium, cities fear businesses will apply for conditional use permits when the <br />amendment takes effect on Jan. 3, but before the state's regulatory framework is established. From <br />there, the courts could get involved. <br />So it makes sense to call a timeout and track one of the hottest topics facing lawmakers next spring: <br />how to regulate the medical marijuana industry. <br />Let's hope they do a better job than the scheme they created after passing a 2014 law that allows <br />doctors to prescribe a non -euphoric version of cannabis — a process that ended with only six large <br />companies being allowed to grow and distribute medical marijuana in Florida. <br />State Sen. Jeff Brandes, R -St. Petersburg, who filed a medical marijuana bill last year, favors a system <br />that lets anyone apply for a medical marijuana business license and lets dispensers operate separately <br />from growers, opening up opportunities for small, minority-owned companies. <br />Brandes also wants cities to have some say on where dispensaries may be located. "We really do want <br />to have local control," he said. "My constituents want that." <br />Local control could allow some communities to ban dispensaries altogether, but Brandes envisions <br />someone creating a regulated delivery service that helps patients too sick to travel. <br />Boca Raton vice mayor Robert Weinroth said that while he believes in local control, this is a situation <br />where "the Legislature should preempt and have a statewide policy on how we're going to handle <br />this." <br />http://www.sun-sentinel.com/opinion/editorials/fl-editorial-medical-marijuana-20161129-story.htmi 11/30/2016 <br />
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