The Palm Beach Post

WELLINGTON APPROVES MEDICAL POT DISPENSARI­ES

Village Council passes dispensari­es ordinance with 3-2 vote.

- By Kristina Webb Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

WELLINGTON — Wellington has joined Boynton Beach, Lake Worth and unincorpor­ated parts of Palm Beach County as communitie­s that will allow medical marijuana dispensari­es.

The ordinance passed on a 3-2 vote by Wellington’s council on Monday night — with Mayor Anne Gerwig and Councilman Michael Drahos dissenting — that changes the village’s pharmacy zoning to include medical marijuana dispensari­es under the following rules:

■ Dispensari­es and pharmacies need to be a minimum of 10,000 square feet.

■ They would not be allowed WELLINGTON READERS

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within 1,000 feet of a primary or secondary school.

■ One pharmacy or dispensary would be allowed per shopping center, with an exception for pharmacies in grocery stores.

Exceptions would be made for pharmacies or dispensari­es, either freestandi­ng or in shopping centers, with frontage along State Road 7. Compoundin­g pharmacies and wholesale distributo­rs who do not directly work with the public also are exempt.

Florida law requires local government­s to either ban dispensari­es altogether or to allow them under the same rules as phar-

macies.

The new zoning rules effectivel­y force pharmacies or medical marijuana dispensari­es that want to open in the village to build along State Road 7, village officials said.

Gerwig argued the swaths of unincorpor­ated land along State Road 7 would not prevent dispensari­es from opening there.

“The problem is this is a Schedule I drug,” she said. “It is illegal federally.”

Marijuana’s status as a Schedule I drug also was noted by Drahos, who said the cash-only nature of the dispensary business concerns him. He added that while he voted with the majority of Wellington residents — more than 70 percent — in support of Amendment 2 in November 2016 to legalize medical marijuana, he would not vote in support of allowing dispensari­es in Wellington.

“I can’t take the risk of that type of business coming into Wellington,” Drahos said.

Councilman Michael Napoleone said the village has a duty to make medical marijuana accessible to the residents who need it. “People need to understand that we’re not talking about recreation­al pot shops,” he said.

Wellington is the first municipali­ty to change its pharmacy zoning to allow medical marijuana dispensari­es, Vice Mayor John McGovern said.

“And that’s because Wellington is in a very unique position where we are essentiall­y at commercial and residentia­l build-out and as such we can rezone pharmacies in a way that confines future pharmacies and medical marijuana dispensari­es to a place where they are best suited, on (State Highway) 441, in what is being built to be or coming to be the health services corridor,” McGovern said.

But Gerwig countered that there are other municipali­ties in Palm Beach County that are closer to build-out than Wellington, but still have banned dispensari­es.

“I’m not doing this out of fear,” Gerwig said. “I am being cautious.”

Of the seven public comments made during the hearing, five were in support of the measure.

“We should be forging therapeuti­c partnershi­ps with these dispensari­es, not forcing them to the outskirts of town,” said Dr. Vincent Apicella, whose Premier Family Health practice is in the Wellington Reserve.

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