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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMC-1244U t Adopted: April 16, 2007 Effective: April 16, 2007 1 ORDINANCE NO. MC-1244 2 3 AN URGENCY INTERIM ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO ADDING SAN BERNARDINO MUNICIPAL CODE SECTION 19.06.026 (DEVELOPMENT 4 CODE) AND EXTENDING A TEMPORARY MORATORIUM ON THE ESTABLISHMENT AND OPERATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES AND OTHER 5 SIMILAR USES, DECLARING THE URGENCY THEREOF, AND TAKING EFFECT IMMEDIATELY. 6 The Mayor and Common Council ofthe City of San Bernardino do ordain as follows: 7 WHEREAS, on March 19,2007, the Mayor and Council unanimously adopted Ordinance 8 No. MC-1243, An Urgency Interim Ordinance of the City of San Bernardino adding San Bernardino Municipal Code Section 19.06.026 (Development Code) and establishing a temporary moratorium on 9 the establishment and operation of Medical Marijuana Dispensaries and other similar uses, declaring the urgency thereof, and taking effect immediately. 10 WHEREAS, pursuant to Government Code Section 65858, Ordinance No. MC-1243 expires 11 on May 3,2007, forty-five (45) days from its date of adoption unless extended by action of the Mayor and Council; and 12 WHEREAS, an extension of the interim ordinance is needed to allow the Development 13 Services Department to process a permanent ordinance and to schedule noticed public hearings before the Planning Commission and the Mayor and Council; and 14 WHEREAS, legal notice of the April 16, 2007 public hearing before the Mayor and Council 15 to consider this extension of the interim ordinance was published in The Sun newspaper on April 6, 2007; and 16 WHEREAS, in 1996, the voters ofthe State of California approved Proposition 215, which 17 was codified as Health and Safety Code Section 11362.5, et seq. and entitled the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 ("CUA"); and 18 WHEREAS, the intent of Proposition 215 was to enable persons who are in need of medical 19 marijuana for medicinal purposes to obtain and use it under limited specified circumstances; and 20 WHEREAS, on May 14,2001, in u.s. v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative (2001) 532 U.S. 483, the United States Supreme Court held that there was no medical necessity exception to 21 the Controlled Substance Act's prohibition on manufacturing and distributing marijuana; and 22 WHEREAS, on January 1,2004, California Senate Bill ("SB") 420 went into effect (Health and Safety Code Section 11362.7, et seq.). SB 420 was enacted by the Legislature to clarify the scope 23 of the CUA and to allow California cities and counties to adopt and enforce rules and regulations consistent with SB 420 and the CUA. These new regulations and rules became known as the Medical 24 Marijuana Program ("MMP"), which, among other things, enhanced the access of patients and caregivers to medical marijuana through collective, cooperative cultivation projects; and 25 WHEREAS, on June 6, 2005, in Gonzales v. Raich (2005) 545 U.S. I, the United States 26 Supreme Court ruled that the federal Controlled Substances Act is valid even as applied to the intrastate, noncommercial cultivation, possession and use of cannabis for personal medical use on the 27 advice of a physician; and 28 I F:\EMPENO\Ordinances\Urgency Ordinance re temporary ffiOritorium 4-10-07 - medical marijuana. .....pd / MC-1244 1 WHEREAS, on December 6,2006, in the unpublished case of County of San Diego v, San Diego NORML (2006) Case No. GIC 860665, the California Superior Court for the County of San 2 Diego issued an order that upheld the validity of the CUA and the State's MMP, notwithstanding the claim that the CUA and MMP were pre-empted by federal law; and 3 WHEREAS, the County of San Diego has indicated that it intends to appeal the trial court 4 decision; and 5 WHEREAS, these collective case decisions reveal a conflict between federal and state law as to the legality of the CUA, the MMP, and consequently, medical marijuana dispensaries; and 6 WHEREAS, the City must now, in the face of continuing conflict between state and federal 7 law, decide for itself whether, as a land use matter, medical marijuana dispensaries should be permitted, regulated or prohibited; and 8 WHEREAS, the Mayor and Common Council hereby specifically finds as follows: 9 a. The sale, possession, cultivation, and distribution of cannabis is prohibited by federal 10 law, specifically 21 U,S.C. SS 812 and 841, part of the Controlled Substances Act; 11 b, Marijuana continues to be a prohibited Schedule 1 drug under the Controlled Substance Act for which there is no legally accepted medical use under federal law; 12 c. Cities in California continue to receive mixed messages from the state and federal 13 govemments regarding the legality of marijuana for medicinal purposes and the establishment and operation of medical marijuana dispensaries. This confusion has increasingly led to wasted taxpayer 14 dollars as cities have been caught in the middle. Recently, the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration raided several medical marijuana dispensaries in various California cities, despite the 15 state's passage of the CUA. 16 d, Beyond the legality issue, several California cities that have permitted the establishment of medical marijuana dispensaries have found that such medical marijuana dispensaries 17 have resulted in negative and harmful secondary effects, including significant increases in traffic, crime, and noise. 18 e, These harmful secondary effects have involved a wide range of activity including 19 burglaries, takeover robberies of dispensaries, robberies of customers leaving dispensaries, an increase in theft and robberies in the vicinity of dispensaries, illegal re-selling of marijuana obtained from 20 dispensaries, physicians issuing apparently fraudulent recommendations for the use of marijuana, dispensary staff selling marijuana to customers with obviously counterfeit patient identification cards, 21 street dealers attempting to sell marijuana to dispensary customers, dispensary customers using marijuana and then driving under its influence, the sale of other illegal narcotics other than marijuana 22 in the dispensaries, sales of marijuana to minors; and 23 f. For these reasons and those provided during the hearing on this Ordinance, the Mayor and Common Council finds that there is a current and immediate threat to the public health, 24 safety, or welfare, and that the approval of any entitlements for the establishment or operation of a medical marijuana dispensary or other similar uses would result in that threat to public health, safety 25 or welfare, The Mayor and Common Council further finds that the adoption of the Urgency Interim Ordinance extending a temporary moratorium on the establishment or operation of medical marijuana 26 dispensaries and other similar uses is necessary to both protect the public health, safety and welfare and to comply with federal law. 27 28 2 F:\EMPENO\Ordinances\Urgency Ordinance re temporary moritorium 4-1 0-07 . medkal marijuana. wpd I MC-1244 1 NOW THEREFORE, THE MAYOR AND COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS: 2 Section 1. San Bernardino Municipal Code Section 19.06.026 (Development Code) 3 is hereby added to read as follows: 4 19.06.026 Other Prohibited Uses 5 (A) Notwithstanding any conflicting provision(s) in any other section of the San Bernardino Municipal Code, including the Development Code, no Conditional Use Permit, Development Permit, Building Permit, Certificate of Occupancy or Zoning Verification Review (also referred to as "Zoning Consistency Review"), shall be issued or granted for the establishment or operation of a medical marijuana dispensary or similar use. 6 7 8 (B) As used in this section, the following definitions apply: 9 13 1. "Marijuana" means all parts of the plant Cannabis, whether growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every compound manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds or resin. It includes marijuana infused in foodstuff. It does not include the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake made from the seeds of the plant, any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the mature stalks (except resin extracted therefrom), fiber, oil, or cake, or the sterilized seeds of the plant incapable of germination. 10 11 12 14 15 2. "Medical marijuana dispensary" means any business, 16 association, cooperative, club, coop, delivery service, collective, and any other similar use involved in the sale, possession, 17 cultivation, use, and/or distribution of marijuana for medicinal purposes; sometimes commonly referred to as a "medical 18 marijuana clinic." 19 Section 2: This Ordinance is based upon the recitals and findings set forth above, and the accompanying Staff Report and its attachments to this Ordinance, and is adopted pursuant to the 20 authority granted to the City of San Bernardino in Article II, Section 7 of the California Constitution, Article III, Section 31 of the Charter of the City of San Bernardino, and California Government Code 21 Section 65858. 22 Section 3: This Ordinance supersedes and replaces Ordinance No. MC-1243 and shall take effect immediately- and be of no further force and effect 10 months and 15 days from its date of 23 adoption unless extended by action of the Mayor and Common Council. 24 Section 4: During the effective time period of this Ordinance, the Development Services Department and the Planning Commission are hereby directed to consider and process a permanent 25 ordinance prohibiting the establishment or operation of medical marijuana dispensaries and other similar uses in the City of San Bernardino. 26 Section 5: Compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act. The Mayor 27 and Common Council finds that this ordinance is not subject to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to Sections 15061(b)(3) (the activity will not result in a direct or reasonably 28 3 F:\EMPENO\Ordinances\Urgency Ordinance re temporary moritorium 4-1 0-07 - medical marijuana. wpd KC-1244 1 foreseeable indirect physical change in the environment) and l5060(c)(3) (the activity is not a project as defined in Section 15378) of the CEQA Guidelines, California Code of Regulations, Title 14, 2 Chapter 3, because it has no potential for resulting in physical change to the environment, directly or indirectly. 3 Section 6: Severability. If any section, subsection, subdivision, sentence, clause or phrase 4 in this ordinance or any part thereof is for any reason held to be unconstitutional, invalid or ineffective by any court of competent jurisdiction, such decision shall not affect the validity or effectiveness of 5 the remaining portions of this ordinance or any part thereof. The Mayor and Common Council hereby declares that it would have adopted each section irrespective of the fact that anyone or more 6 subsections, subdivisions, sentences, clauses, or phrases be declared unconstitutional, invalid, or ineffective. 7 8 /11 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 4 F:\EMPENO\Ordinances\Urgency Ordinance re temporary IOOritOrium 4-10-07. medical marijuana.wpd , KC-1244 1 AN URGENCY INTERIM ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO ADDING SAN BERNARDINO MUNICIPAL CODE SECTION 19.06.026 (DEVELOPMENT CODE) AND EXTENDING A TEMPORARY MORATORIUM ON THE ESTABLISHMENT AND OPERATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES AND OTHER SIMILAR USES, DECLARING THE URGENCY THEREOF, AND TAKING EFFECT IMMEDlA TEL Y. 2 3 4 I HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing Ordinance was duly adopted by the Mayor and 5 Common Council of the City of San Bernardino at a j oint regular meeting thereof, held 6 on the 16th day of April 7 8 COUNCIL MEMBERS: AYES 9 ESTRADA X 10 BAXTER X 11 BRINKER X 12 DERRY ----X- 13 KELLEY ----X- 14 JOHNSON ~ 15 MC CAMMACK ~ 16 ,2007, by the following vote, to wit: NAYS ABSTAIN ABSENT 19 Au CltJJJv h ~;n~htedm~~hJb The foregoing Ordinance is hereby appU this t1 . day of April --V':z~~71. 17 18 20 21 22 '-., 23 Approved as to form: 24 JAMES F. PENMAN City Attorney 25 26 L~.~ ).~ 27 U 28 5 F:\EMPENO\Ordinances\Urgency Ordinance re temporary moritorium 4-10-07 - medical marijuana.wpd