from the LA Times:
Medical marijuana advocates sue Los Angeles
Plaintiffs say the city's new ordinance, which hasn't yet taken effect, is too restrictive and violates California law. They seek a court injunction and restraining order to stop it from being enforced.By Tony Barboza
March 3, 2010
Medical marijuana advocates upped the ante in the legal battle over Los Angeles' pot dispensaries by suing the city Tuesday, saying the recently adopted ordinance is so restrictive it will cause even law-abiding businesses to shut down.
Americans for Safe Access, the nation's main medical marijuana advocacy nonprofit group, filed the lawsuit along with the Venice Beach Care Center and Pure Life Alternative Wellness Center, two dispensaries that have operated in Los Angeles since 2006 -- before the city's moratorium on dispensaries took effect.
The 11-page suit filed in L.A. County Superior Court says the sweeping marijuana ordinance passed by the City Council in January and signed into law by the mayor Feb. 3 "severely restricts access to medical marijuana by effectively forcing plaintiffs, as well as the vast majority of collectives in the city, to close their doors."
The law won't take effect until the council approves registration fees that dispensaries must pay. City officials are still working to determine what the fees will be.
The suit alleges that the ordinance violates state law, and the plaintiffs seek a court injunction and restraining order to stop it from being enforced. Dispensary operators object to the "onerous restrictions" of the law, such as a rule giving them only seven days after the ordinance takes effect to relocate to 1,000 feet away from schools, parks and places of worship but does not provide maps to show where they can operate. .........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-medical-marijuana3-2010mar03,0,3839214.story