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Thursday, August 26, 2010

NEWS: Medical marijuana collective takes Long Beach to court over permit application

LONG BEACH - A medical marijuana collective is taking the city of Long Beach to court today after it wasn't allowed to submit an application for a permit under the city's new marijuana law.

Alternative Herbal Health Collective, 3702 E. Anaheim St., filed a petition in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Aug. 16 asking the court to force the city to accept the collective's application.

That hearing is set for Nov. 23, but Friday's hearing in downtown Los Angeles is for a temporary restraining order against Long Beach to allow the collective to remain open past an Aug. 30 city deadline. The collective wants to continue operating until its legal challenge is resolved.

Under the medical marijuana ordinance approved by the City Council in March, collectives can't be located within 1,500 feet of high schools or 1,000 feet of elementary schools.

Alternative Herbal Health Collective is too close to both types of schools, Deputy City Attorney Cristyl Meyers said Thursday.

That meant that the collective couldn't even apply for a permit to continue to operate.

"They were advised that the proposed location wasn't within a permitted area and that the city wouldn't accept the application, nor would it accept the processing fee," Meyers said.

In the collective's petition for a peremptory writ of mandate filed with the court, it disputes that it is within the school buffer zone. The collective also says that it has complied with all of the other requirements of the law.

Richard Brizendine, the attorney for the collective, couldn't be reached for comment Thursday.

Even if the collective had been able to submit its permit and pay the $14,742, non-refundable application fee, that wouldn't mean that it is guaranteed to continue operating.

In addition to schools, Long Beach's ordinance prohibits collectives from being within 1,000 feet of each other, as well. Collectives that meet the requirements of the law and file their permits on time are to be placed in a lottery to determine which ones can stay open.

The collectives that didn't meet the initial requirements to submit a permit at all were advised that they must close by Aug. 30, Meyers said. If they don't, Long Beach could take criminal and civil legal action against the collective operators, she said.

Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram

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