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75A - PH - MEDICAL MARIJUANA - PROHIBIT
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75A - PH - MEDICAL MARIJUANA - PROHIBIT
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Last modified
1/3/2012 4:37:35 PM
Creation date
9/26/2007 2:00:08 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Item #
75A
Date
10/1/2007
Destruction Year
2012
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Jan. 31, 2001 ~ SAN FRANCISCO -- To get pot, you can stand on 16th and Mission and <br />wait for someone to approach you, and wander if he's a cop, and wonder if he's gain.g to <br />rob you, and wonder if his pot is laced with strychnine. Or you can. have a dull pain in <br />your right ear. In a green box on the back. page of the San Francisco Bay Guardian, Dr. <br />R. Stephen Ellis advertises medical marijuana. physician evaluations for just about <br />anyone. The ad contains no explicit offers or promises, just a list of symptoms that <br />presumably qualify one far legal pat: "A_norexia ... chronic pain.... arthritis ... migraine, o_r <br />ANY other condition for which marijuana provides relief." This is from California Health <br />& Safety Code 11362.5, implemented after California passed Proposition 215, also <br />known as the Medical Marijuana/Compassionate Use Act, in 1996. In case his point is <br />unclear, the ad goes on to interpret "ANA"': asthma, neuropathy, HIV discomfort, <br />constipation, old injury pains, etc. At the bottom, boldfaced, underlined, i.n caps, we're <br />reassured: "It's TIDE LAW!" lvly ear hurts, I tell the assistant over th.e phone. He tells me <br />to bring $200 cash. No check or credit card'? I ask.. Cash, he says. Ellis' office is at the <br />end of a long, dark corridor in a tall building next to a fabric store. The $200 cash does <br />not go toward interior decoration. A cardboard sign with Ellis' name is taped to the glass <br />on the wood. door, which appears to be a good 50 years old. This is medical marijuana <br />nair. That Philip Marlowe isn't smoking a cigarette on the other side seems to be a <br />miscalculation on the director's part. Not that the other side isn't dark. In the grimy <br />waiting room, which is just a little bigger than a glass of whisltey, si.x toed men. in plastic <br />chairs take their- eyes off the linoleum only briefly. "I have an appointment," I say to <br />Ellis' assistant behind the window. He's young, wearing a sweat. shin. "Have a sea.t," he <br />says, banding me a clipboard. There shouldn't be enough room for two camps in the tiny <br />room, but the six patients manage to segregate themselves. To my left are the ill; three <br />men between 35 and 54 sink into their chairs and stare at things in the floor that I can't <br />see. Their eyes are glassy, and two of their Beads are chemo-bald. To my right are three <br />young men, none over 22 surely. They slump too, but with attitude, not sickness. They <br />have baggy jeans and each has acne. The young camp looks at its shoes. The man <br />directly to my left says he has glaucoma. He's grumpy about waiting. The man to his left <br />says he's new to medicinal marijuana and is shaking and giddy. The roan to his left sells <br />sports tickets for a living, and is doing so on a cell phone, apparently unfazed by his <br />circumstances. The grump beside me is New Agey and shakes his head whenever the cell <br />phone rings. To my right are frauds. "I hurt my back playing football," the bi.g one next <br />to me says. He grins conspirarorially, as if he's never touched a football in his stoner life. <br />Across from us a raver taps his toes. He grins, too, when I make eye contact. The surfer <br />next to him grins too. "I better get this before my man Note's party Friday," he says to no <br />one in particular. How long does it take to get the prescription filled?" I ask. "My other <br />friend got some from a San Francisco dispensary two days after his evaluation," he says. <br />I wonder how many scammers it would take to undermine tl~e medical marijuana cause. <br />(This line of thinking is a vector from the anti-pot camp's faulty premise; penicillin. would <br />never be criminalized just because some people were smoking it on Friday nights.) And <br />while it's entirely possible that none of these guys will leave today with a prescription, <br />the quiet raver does eventually have his appointment and walk out with a thumbs up. He <br />directs the thumbs up at me. It's assumed I'm in the fraud. boat too. <br />32 <br />7 5A-41 <br />
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