For Mario Mamone, the dream of opening a
marijuana cafe started 10 years ago on his first trip to Amsterdam,
where he visited famous hash bars like Green House and Dampkring.
Now the 62-year-old
retired wildlife biologist is close to bringing his vision to Gladstone. This month he plans to open the Maritime Cafe in a Southeast McLoughlin
Boulevard strip mall, between a Curves Fitness Center and a headshop
called the Stash. The cafe will be open only to medical-marijuana
patients over 18. Plans by Mamone and his partner, Tim Welsh, include
intimate booths, pot-leaf murals and killer buds for $10 a gram.
“We’re looking for a place where people can come and hang and listen to music,” Mamone says. “A romantic atmosphere.”
Maritime will be the
latest addition to a growing industry in Oregon. Voters last year
defeated a ballot measure that would have set up rules for a statewide
system of dispensaries to sell pot to patients. The measure’s failure
didn’t stop people from opening dispensary-style businesses (see “Weed,
the People,” Jan. 12, 2011). The shops remain unregulated, and some
establishments push the boundaries between clinic and social club.
That’s made them a bigger target for law enforcement and opened rifts inside the medical-marijuana movement.
“These places are set
up like a party,” says Donald Morse, who helps run the Human Collective
clinic in Tigard. “You don’t see people on dialysis having a party.”
Oregon’s
medical-marijuana law, approved by voters in 1998, makes no mention of
dispensaries. But it allows patients to designate a grower, and it lets
those growers charge patients for expenses like fertilizer, lights and
power.
Advocates say
Oregon’s program is flawed for patients who lack a grower. Club
operators like Mamone say they’re working within the law to fill that
need.
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CANNABIS CURE: Human Collective director Sarah Bennett (right) helps a client at the Collective’s clinic in Tigard.
Credits: Darryl James
Law enforcement stands ready to harsh their mellow.
“I am confident the
residents of Gladstone do not want a marijuana coffeehouse in their
community,” says Clackamas County District Attorney John Foote. “If he
wants to dance around the edge of the law, he runs the risk of getting
arrested.”
Attorney General Eric
Holder said in 2009 the Justice Department would end the Bush
administration’s raids on state-sanctioned medical-marijuana facilities.
Pot remains illegal under federal law. But this spring saw an apparent
change in policy, as federal prosecutors wrote letters to governors in
Washington, Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Vermont and Rhode Island
threatening a crackdown on dispensaries.
U.S. Attorney Mike
Ormsby in Spokane vowed “quick and direct action” in an April 6 letter
to Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire, who promptly vetoed a bill to license
growers and dispensaries. Spokane-area pot shops saw a string of
closures.
No such letter has
gone out in Oregon, and interim U.S. Attorney Dwight Holton wouldn’t say
whether he’s planning similar action. But it’s clear Holton is no
friend to folks like Mamone.
“I’m struck by the
brazenness of recent dispensaries who seem to think they are above the
law,” Holton says. “It’s drug trafficking. Period. End of story.”
Dispensaries aren’t
legal in Oregon, so operators call them “clubs” or “co-ops.” They claim
to work on a consignment model: Growers give weed to the club, which
sells it to patients and reimburses the growers. The clubs charge
membership fees.
Portland cops aren’t
concerned, says Lt. Robert King, a spokesman for the police bureau.
Clubs in Southeast include Foster Healing Center and Highway 420.
“It’s more or less a
regulated and lawful establishment,” King says. “We assist if they need
any assistance, but by and large they don’t.”
Not so in the suburbs. After WW
featured the Aloha club Wake n Bake in our Jan. 12 cover story,
co-owner Kat Cambron says Washington County sheriff’s deputies have
pulled over about a dozen members as they leave.
Cambron says the
members are searched, given roadside sobriety tests and questioned about
the club. No one has been arrested, but Cambron worries they face
harassment due to their medical needs.
“If you see somebody
pulling out of a place where you know people are smoking marijuana,
you’re going to watch how they’re driving,” says Sgt. Dave Thompson,
spokesman for the sheriff’s office. “They’re aware it’s there. Nobody’s
targeting it.”
Elsewhere in
Washington County, Morse’s nonprofit Human Collective looks and feels
like a doctor’s office. Patients purchase weed in child-proof medicine
bottles for $5 to $8 a gram.
“Maybe we’re deluding
ourselves, but we like to think places like Wake n Bake should be
busted before this place,” Morse says. “We would be honored to be the
test pilot for how it should be done.”
FACT: As of April 1 there were 39,774 patients registered with the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program. By county: 6,796 in Multnomah, 2,735 in Washington and 2,835 in Clackamas.
It's great to see my rendering for the design - just wish I was credited for it!
Mike Sauer, Owner
Glen Michaels Interiors
503-724-6156
@Mike, looks like the waiting room of a putting green. Is that the look you were going for? Love the idea, but the design in way weak.
James Pitkin, it seems your story has taken statements by Morse and others out of context. The MMJ community is indeed grappling with ways to stay legal under current laws and regulations.
Pitkin writes: "The shops remain unregulated, and some establishments push the boundaries between clinic and social club. "
Just how does a cancer patient or someone with a OMMA can obtain medicine? Can it be bought? Or does a cancer patient have to work for it? How would WW dispense it to those in need without calling it a dispensary?
And off course Mr. Holton is going to uphold the lie that cannabis is not medicine, he gets paid to do so!! That's his job to lie.
re Mr. Morse's comment that some dispensaries in Oregon "are set up like a party". His observation that this isn't the case in dialysis clinics may be true, don't know because I haven't undergone dialysis. I have undergone chemotherapy, however, and it's extremely depressing as well as physically draining. The sense of isolation felt by patients in that situation is enormous, and it's counterproductive in terms of their healing. Little things can help alleviate that, like when another patient or a nurse brings in some cake to share, or there are videos or music CDs available. I suppose some on the outside might think of that sort of thing as a "party", yet what it's really about is patients helping each other get through a difficult time.
People who suffer from chronic disorders or severe/acute illnesses often feel shut out of the broader society because they have special needs, and sometimes maybe because some physically healthy people just don't like being around folks who are ill. The fellowship which these patients feel at medical cannabis facilities that have patient lounges can be immensely therapeutic. I understand that on-site consumption can seem controversial, however the benefit for patients more than justifies the existence of such facilities.
America can takwe the approach articulated by the US Attorney, and wallow in misery forevcer. Or you could pay attention to someone wiser:
Major Panel: Drug War Failed; Legalize Marijuana
NEW YORK (AP) — The global war on drugs has failed and governments should explore legalizing marijuana and other controlled substances, according to a commission that includes former heads of state, a former U.N. secretary-general and a business mogul.
A new report by the Global Commission on Drug Policy argues that the decades-old "global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world." The 24-page paper will be released Thursday.
"Political leaders and public figures should have the courage to articulate publicly what many of them acknowledge privately: that the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that repressive strategies will not solve the drug problem, and that the war on drugs has not, and cannot, be won," the report said.
The 19-member commission includes former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former U.S. official George P. Schultz, who held cabinet posts under U.S. Presidents Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon. Others include former U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, former presidents of Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, writers Carlos Fuentes and Mario Vargas Llosa, U.K. business mogul Richard Branson and the current prime minister of Greece.
Instead of punishing users who the report says "do no harm to others," the commission argues that governments should end criminalization of drug use, experiment with legal models that would undermine organized crime syndicates and offer health and treatment services for drug-users in need."
More at NYTimes.com...............
I predict it is only a matter of time before a cannabis club/dispensary opens a location that is contiguous to an OLCC licenseee. Combining green and microbrew (and strippers???) seems like a winning business model, but time will tell whether it will be possible. While bars are accustomed to people moving in and out of the bar to go to the "smoking area", I suspect the club/dispensary folks will take longer to become comfortable with their patrons taking a break from smoking to go out and get a Widmer (and a lap dance).
i hope you are wrong, i don't want the OLCC anywhere near my medicine. what do they know about health? really?