With a ruling on Pack v. Long Beach two years away, Huizar, who is rumored to covet Trutanich's job, has warned, "If we do nothing, by the time the state Supreme Court decides, we would have a number of disruptions in the community."
"Make no bones," retorts Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe Access, "L.A. is digging its heels in. If it wanted to, today it could amend its ordinance to satisfy the litigants in these cases. But it chooses not to. It would rather ban the dispensaries altogether than comply with demands."
ILLUSTRATION BY JESSE LENZ
PHOTO BY JENNIE WARREN
Isa Aron hadn't smoked pot for 32 years.
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If the City Council surprises its critics in the next several weeks by rejecting prohibition and trying, again, to adopt regulations, there are several successful examples the 15 council members could copy: Oakland (hard cap allowing four dispensaries), San Francisco (no cap but very strict zoning laws) and, perhaps most intriguingly, Colorado.
Starting in 2010, Colorado began enacting the most comprehensive medical marijuana regulations in the country, if not the world. Its regulations go on for hundreds of pages and cover an astonishing array of topics: how many community meetings to have before opening a dispensary, how many megapixels the security cameras should have, what fonts to use on edibles' labels, and on and on.
Colorado is the only state in the U.S. that allows dispensaries to make a profit. Although Denver has more dispensaries per capita than Los Angeles, it hasn't seen anywhere near the level of controversy and outrage.
L.A. city officials dismiss the Denver prototype. "There was pressure on us to copy what had been upheld in other jurisdictions," Usher says, "but we felt it didn't appropriately represent what is in this city."
It's an explanation often given at L.A. City Hall when unique schemes by the City Council go bad, as they frequently do.
My mom smoked pot for about five months, a toke or two before going to bed, enough to dull the pain and get to sleep. She bought a vaporizer so she could smoke in the house. She took some pot with her to New York, making her an interstate drug trafficker.
It made for a funny story — but then, she was far from the only one of her friends smoking pot. In the end, it was a prescription drug that brought her permanent pain relief, an antidepressant called Cymbalta.
Others aren't so lucky. Matt Cohen, operator of the Natural Way L.A., is also a patient.
His belly hangs far below his waistline like a laundry bag — a disturbing physical symptom of what he calls "the most horrendous ventral hernia condition that Cedars [-Sinai] has ever seen."
For Cohen, the fact is, "I wouldn't be out of bed if it weren't for pot."
One female dispensary employee says, by contrast, "I look normal, I look pretty and I look young on the outside, but I've had psychotic episodes and had to be locked up in mental hospitals. I've taken Xanax, Zoloft, Prozac, every antidepressant under the sun. Nothing works. Cannabis does."
But the duality of medical marijuana keeps popping up, giving ammunition to the prohibition side. The same dispensary worker posted the following Facebook message on a friend's wall: "yyoooo you me and a blunt when I'm off work."
People all over the world use marijuana both ways — medicinally and recreationally. Separating the two will always be a pipe dream.
Reach the writer at hillelaron@mac.com.