The Palm Beach Post

City poised to OK medical pot dispensari­es

Commission­ers set restrictio­ns in advance of final vote June 18.

- By Tony Doris Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

The city

WEST PALM BEACH — gave initial approval for medical marijuana dispensari­es to open in nonresiden­tial areas, with few restrictio­ns.

City Commission­ers voted

unanimousl­y last Monday to allow dispensari­es and regulate them no differentl­y than pharmacies, except that they can’t be closer than 500 feet from a school.

Should they give final approval, as expected June 18, West Palm would join Lake Worth, Wellington, Boynton Beach and Deerfield Beach in allowing the dis

pensaries, which sell pot for prescripti­on use. Although still illegal under federal law, 29 states permit medical marijuana, and

nine states, in the West and New England, allow marijuana for rec- reational use.

The dispensari­es are spreading throughout Florida. The state legalized medical marijuana for terminal illness in 2014, then broadened the law in 2016 to allow its use for terminal and non-terminal illness, including cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, PTSD, ALS, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s and conditions of comparable severity.

The law allows physicians to prescribe medical marijuana in the form of oils, extracts, sprays, oral syringe or edibles. Dispensari­es also are restricted to selling medical pot and related products and cannot sell other products such as tobacco or nicotine-infused oil. The law allows dispensari­es to sell both low-potency

and euphoric cannabis. Smoking medical marijuana remains prohibited, although a Leon County Circuit Court Judge ruled it unconstitu­tional. The Florida Department of Health is

appealing the ruling.

Florida law gives municipali­ties a choice — a city or town can ban dispensari­es altogether, or it can allow them and treat them like pharmacies.

According to West Palm Senior Planner Paul Greilich, municipali­ties that have voted to ban dispensari­es include Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Mangonia Park, Palm Beach Gardens and Royal Palm Beach. In Broward County, Pompano Beach, Sunrise, Margate and Coral Springs also banned medical marijuana dispensari­es.

In a constituti­onal amendment on statewide ballots on Nov. 8, 2016, voters overwhelmi­ngly supported legalized medical marijuana, Greilich said: Statewide, 71 percent voted for it; in Palm Beach County, 75 percent did; and in West Palm Beach, 77 percent approved it.

West Palm held off on approving dispensari­es until now, while staff studied the issue and how other municipali­ties fared with it. But the mayor and commission­ers have acknowledg­ed the dispensari­es’ public appeal and Monday it passed swiftly and with little discussion.

Greilich said the city considered recommendi­ng not allowing dispensari­es “on high-visibility corridors,” such as Clematis Street and Rosemary Avenue, but opted not to include such a restrictio­n in Monday’s motion. “Doing so would prohibit pharmacies,” he explained.

The city’s Downtown Action Committee approved the proposed ordinance May 9 by a 7-0 vote; the Planning Board approved it May 15, by 5-1.

In addition to being at least 500 feet from schools, under state law, dispensari­es must have alarm and video surveillan­ce systems, have sufficient outdoor lighting and be closed from 9 p.m. to 7 a.m.

At least two employees or two security guards must be on the premises at all times. And the shops are not allowed to post advertisin­g that is visible to the public from the street or sidewalk.

 ?? BRUCE R. BENNETT / THE PALM BEACH POST ?? Mark Batievsky, Knox Medical’s director of retail operations, at Palm Beach County’s first medical marijuana dispensary, in Lake Worth, last November.
BRUCE R. BENNETT / THE PALM BEACH POST Mark Batievsky, Knox Medical’s director of retail operations, at Palm Beach County’s first medical marijuana dispensary, in Lake Worth, last November.

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