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Marijuana Dispensary Numbers Remain Near 2009 High: Starbucks or Weed, You'll Find Plenty of Choices in Los Angeles

Categories: Marijuana

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This place was ordered to close a long time ago.
Even after the city of L.A. tried to whittle down the number of pot shops to 100, even after a city councilman is proposing to outlaw them altogether, even after the federal government has announced a crackdown on California dispensaries, L.A. remains the medical marijuana capital of the nation.

When things were out of control in late 2009 and the city was struggling to get a grip on the burgeoning number of cannabis storefronts in L.A. -- some estimated there were more of them than Starbucks -- LA Weekly did perhaps the most comprehensive count of shops. It was so thorough that the City Attorney's office later based its estimates on ours. We came up with this number: 545.

After all that's happened since then you would think they were becoming extinct. Think again:

The L.A. City Attorney's office estimates that today there are 500 pot shops in L.A., office spokesman Frank Mateljan tells the Weekly.

Many have stood in defiance of city law, and now many appear to be failing to pay their city taxes.

The city counts 372 of them that have registered to pay up under a voter-approved plan that will tax their sales by 5 percent, according to the Los Angeles Times.

That's still an amazing number of dispensaries that are trying to act legit. As late as March the city told 141 dispensaries they weren't even close to being legal and must shut their doors. (Yeah, right).

L.A. was trying to limit shops to those that had been opened before a 2007 moratorium. And even all those would not ultimately be legal. But many a court challenge later and the dispensaries have remained defiant.

Now City Councilman Jose Huizar is proposing to ban pot shops in L.A. altogether after a California court ruled that Long Beach (and, by proxy, L.A.) can't regulate them the way they do (or try to) now.

Strange coming from a guy whose district has been inundated with illicit retailers and who has been a medical weed supporter. His move could cost the city $10 million in much needed tax dollars in future years.

The good news for you medical smokers is that these shops seem to thrive like weeds, no matter what the city does.

[@dennisjromero/djromero@laweekly.com/@LAWeeklyNews]


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9 comments
Weezyhose
Weezyhose

Too close to mention? Laura Elena Zúñiga HuizarFrom WikipediaLaura Elena Zúñiga Huizar (born January 3, 1985 in Culiacán, Sinaloa) is a Mexican model and beauty queen, center of a drug trafficking scandal in December of 2008. The critically acclaimed 2011 film, Miss Bala, (Miss Bullet) is loosely based on Zúñiga and her involvement in the events of December 2008.

Muzzylu
Muzzylu

There are thousands of liquor stores, and no one bellyaches about them. Open more medical marijuana places and tax them. It will help the budget and the patients.Medical marijuana, and all marijuana should be legal! It is helpful to people for pain reduction and other maladies, plus marijuana can be a much less harmful recreational drug than liquor, heroin, crack, and cocaine.Great book on medical marijuana: MARIJUANA - Guide to Buying, Growing, Harvesting, and Making Medical Marijuana Oil and Delicious Chocolates to Treat Pain and Ailments by Mary Bendis. This book has great recipe for marijuana oil and tasty, yummy chocolates!

Jeff
Jeff

Pot Shops by law are supposed to be non for profit so they can't be taxed.

Donkey Hotay
Donkey Hotay

Lots of chronically ill people in LA need their "meds" ....

Duncan20903
Duncan20903

There's still been no explanation of why a retail distribution chain which consists of primarily single unit store fronts is compared to the number of outlets of a single owner, multinational, retail chain. How many coffee shops are in L.A.? What, Peet's and all the single unit mom & pops don't count. A quick search of yellowbook dot com returns 470 items for "coffee shop" in Los Angeles.

For his next trick Mr. Romero will present a thoughtful comparison of apples and concrete jersey barriers. 

Jeff
Jeff

"The good news for you medical smokers is that these shops seem to thrive like weeds, no matter what the city does."

Very very sad and it is time for the City to step up already! To many delays and hold ups for what seems a eternity. I see re-sales from the shop to the streets all the time, trashing, loitering,robberies, killings, blatant advertising in the wrong circles etc.And there is more.....

Duncan20903
Duncan20903

“Never let the facts stand in the way of disseminating an effective piece of hysterical rhetoric” ~ The motto of the Know Nothing prohibitionist 

Duncan20903
Duncan20903

You'd better believe the people in San Francisco know how to file complaints. From the SF Weekly:----------S.F. Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Generate Only 11 Complaints in Five Years By Chris RobertsJul. 15 2011

Pot clubs. They're boring. You go in, you buy some pot, you leave. For all the clamor a new medical cannabis dispensary's opening receives from jumpy John Q. Public, with a few notable exceptions, most we see these days resemble dentists' offices, not dens of iniquity (and, we suspect, the drugs in dentists' offices are more fun, if you're into that kind of thing).

Know what's even more boring? Reading the list of citizen complaints San Francisco's medical cannabis dispensaries have generated over the past few years.

SF Weekly recently asked the Department of Public Health, which oversees the city's dispensary program, for a compendium of recent problems with the city's cannabis collectives. And we received it: A grand total of 11 complaints on file over a five-year period, according to the documents we received from our public records request.

Want some bedtime reading? Then click on, dear reader. 

2006: A neighbor upstairs from HopeNet on Ninth Street writes to say that the stench from the dispensary is exacerbating his emphysema. A DPH inspector visits and smells pot; can't reach the complainant after a few tries. Result: resolved.

2007: Canna Med Care on Sutter Street -- since closed -- was using a scale that was off by .4 grams. In a separate complaint filed that year, a neighbor on Dore Alley says that HopeNet's customers were blocking the sidewalk. HopeNet asked not to block the sidewalk. Also, workers at 1525 Howard Street complain that the smell from Emmalyn's is too much. DPH visits but can't detect a scent.

2008: The bathroom at HopeNet wasn't working. It was working when DPH visited. Another complaint said that outside of 442 Haight Street (now a shoe store) the presence of a "known drug dealer" alarmed a neighbor who later sees people smoking pot outside the establishment on two separate occasions. That matter was referred to SFPD.

2009 was the dirty year: Green Goddess at 940 Geary Street was selling pot without a permit. Also, 194 Church Street was doing the same thing. Both operations were shut down.

2010: Grassroots on Post Street was selling more than an ounce per visit, in violation of city rules. Told not to do it anymore. Another complaint said that a man on Palm Avenue in Laurel Heights upset his neighbors by making cannabis lollipops in his kitchen. He said he'll stop.

2011: A man who claims to have top-security clearance from the United States government says he was assaulted outside of SPARC, and that he received harassing e-mails and phone calls following "a traumatic brain injury."

Had enough? So have we. Suffice to say that San Francisco medical cannabis dispensaries are hardly the most threatening entities in town. In fact, we believe that the local Pet Food Express has generated more contention.

But this comes as no surprise to cannabis advocates -- it's what they've been saying for years, in fact.

"How many other businesses have had that few complaints against them?" asks David Goldman with the S.F. chapter of Americans for Safe Access. "How many bars, how many drugstores -- how many banks? I'd say the medical cannabis dispensary industry is amazingly complaint-free compared to other industries."

Duncan20903
Duncan20903

...blatant fiction presented by the Know Nothing prohibitionist. Why do these people think that spinning fiction from whole cloth is an appropriate method of arguing their point?----------Police: Medical pot dispensaries seldom face violent crime12:02 AM, Apr 21, 2011SACRAMENTO, CA- Sacramento police said local medical marijuana dispensaries do not tend to attract violent crime at a higher level than other businesses.

"For the most part, dispensaries don't have that much (of a) crime problem," Sacramento Police spokesman Norm Leong said. "Although we get some complaints of traffic and stuff like that."

Owner of A Therapeutic Alternative dispensary Jeanne Larsson said a pair of bars across the street from a nearby middle school attract far more crime than her clinic, or others.

"Armed robbery, drunk driving, credit card fraud, gang activity and a host of other things that have occurred during school hours," Larsson said.

Larsson's clinic has high resolution cameras, powerful outside lights and an armed watchman as part of it's security.

Businesses near her dispensary said it has not brought any problems to the area.

"It's quiet. No crimes." said Nancy Tan, who works at a dental clinic just behind the dispensary.

Across the street, Shannon Andery, who works at the Pulp Papery, said the clinic has not brought any crime.

"The only problem we have is a lot of times we get customers who don't know where the shop is and we have to direct them over there. That's all," Andery said.

Even when dispensaries do face crime, police said it is rarely violent.

"Violent crime and such don't happen much," Leong said. "We get more robberies and burglaries than anything." 

News10/KXTV

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