Category Archives: Dispensaries

Content focused on medical cannabis collectives and dispensaries

Magnolia Primes Plasma Pump: Give Blood, Get Baked Good


BY ED MURRIETA

Still not convinced that medical cannabis dispensaries are part of the lifeblood of the communities they serve? Consider that patient members of Orangevale’s Magnolia Wellness Collective gave 25 pints of plasma in last year’s Orangevale Community Blood Drive.

Magnolia, which just became the Sacramento region’s first dispensary to unionized its employees, hopes to double the amount of donated blood this year. To prime the plasma pump, Magnolia will give its registered patients a free medicated edible from Uncle Buck’s Bakery when they donate blood at Friday’s drive. Better than the donuts and orange juice people usually get for donating blood.

Orangevale Community Blood Drive at the
Orangevale Community Center
6826 Hazel Ave., Orangevale
Friday, Oct. 28, 2pm-6pm

Here’s a map for those who want to go from the blood drive location to Magnolia Wellness Collective to get their Uncle Buck baked good.

Pot Parties in Sacramento: A Fund-Raiser, a Farewell, a Fright

BY ED MURRIETA

Two cannabis-themed events with “frightful” overtones are planned for Saturday night at two Sacramento medical cannabis dispensaries. One event is a fund-raiser for a group of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research. The other event marks a dispensary’s closure as Sacramento County and the federal government put the scare on the industry.

At Common Roots Collective in south Sacramento, the cannabis activist group Americans for Safe Access hosts “Puff Puff Politics.” According to ASA’s flyer for the event, “It’s like a wine tasting but with cannabis.” Three top medical strains will be tasted, and cannabis activists will lead discussions between tastings. There’ll even be a silent auction of jack o’ lanterns carved in cannabis themes.

Tickets are $50 per person; you can buy them online. Attendees are promised swag bags of goodies. Bhang, the top-tier cannabis chocolatier, is among the sponors. The promoter told me today that other sponors, speakers and tasting panelists won’t be revealed until Friday.

Americans for Safe Access is the largest national member-based organization of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research. Common Roots is like a farmers market collective, with licensed cannabis growers offering their products directly to patients. No grams over $10. Commom Roots offers art therapy and yoga, and has hosted reggae bands and an African dance troupe in its large warehouse space, which has been blessed by a shamanic healer.

The Farmers Market could use some healing juju. The medical cannabis dispensary on the edge of the old Mather Field in Sacramento County is throwing a party on Saturday night, but instead of raising funds with a frightful holiday event, The Farmers Market, like many medical cannabis dispensaries, is being scared out of operation. Saturday’s customer appreciation party will be The Farmers Market’s last — its last party and its last day of business before it switches to a delivery-only business model.

I had the pleasure of attending The Farmers Market’s two previous customer appreciation parties in the past month. Both were fun and informative, featuring food — grilled hot dogs and polish sausage one night, a do-it-your-self nacho bar the other night — and soft drinks and snacks. One event featured edibles makers who not only offered samples of their products but offered insight into infusing cannabis into water — a simple prodedure with powerful effects. Of course, both nights offered heavy doses of bonhomie — people talking, sharing, enjoying themselves and enjoying each other’s company, the things that happen in clean, comfortable social settings. Many people were enjoying cannabis — in joints, in pipes, and vaporized in elaborate bongs that cried out to be shared, if only for their conversation-piece value.

The Farmers Market bills Saturday’s event as a Harvest Party. But, really, given the cannabis crackdown, the party marks anything but a harvest. What Sacramento County is doing — spitting in the face of a voter-approved state initiative, turning its back on jobs and tax revenue — amounts to burning your fields in the face of famine. What the federal governent is doing — withholding cannabis research approval, threatening to seize property and prosecute landowners, ensuring ever-larger profits for the pharmaceuticals industry — is a fright worth fighting.

Puff Puff Politics, a fund-raiser for Americans for Safe Access: Oct. 29, 7 p.m.-midnight, Common Roots Collective, 3039 52nd Ave., Unit B, Sacramento. Tickets: $50.

The Farmers Market Harvest Party, 7 p.m.-midnight, 3791 Bradview Drive, Sacramento.

Feds Bark and Cities Back Off on Cannabis Dispensary Approvals

One dispensary operator says this US Attorney, Benjamin Walker, scares everybody.

BY ED MURRIETA

The cities of Sacramento and Eureka are cowering as the federal government intensifies its war on medical cannabis. As the 15th anniversary of the passage of the voter-approved ballot initiative that legalized cannabis for medicinal use in California approaches, Sacramento and Eureka retreat.

The city of Sacramento, unnerved by a federal crackdown on dispensaries, abruptly suspended its process for issuing permits to dispensaries, the Sacramento Bee reports.

“As a result of the uncertain climate on medical marijuana, I have directed staff to freeze or halt the processing of applications for medical marijuana,” City Manager John Shirey said in a memo to the City Council. “As of this time, we will not accept any new applications or set future hearing dates until we receive further direction … on the legal viability of the city’s medical marijuana ordinance.”

In a memo, obtained by the Bee, Shirley cited the specter of federal action against dispensaries as a reason for suspending the permitting process. Shirey also noted a recent state appellate court ruling that found a Long Beach ordinance regulating dispensaries runs afoul of federal law, which regards marijuana as an illegal drug, medical or otherwise.

Meantime in Eureka, the largest city in cannabis-producing Humbolt County, the city council is backing down after standing up. Just weeks after opting to stay the course in the face of threatened federal action regarding its medical cannabis ordinance, Eureka is now rethinking its strategy, citing the Long Beach case.

”We will probably talk about a moratorium, at the very least,” Councilman Mike Newman told the Eureka Times-Standard, adding that the legal landscape of medical marijuana cannabis has shifted notably since the council declined to institute a moratorium on the issuance of the permits at its Oct. 4 meeting.

Eureka’s decision to reconsider its ordinance leaves one dispensary’s conditional use permit application in the lurch. In Sacramento, 33 dispensaries are in various stages of the city permit process, and only four dispensaries have been issued operating permits.

As the Bee reports, the city’s “temporary freeze” doesn’t mean that the 38 dispensaries operating in the city will have to close.

Closing the dispensaries would cut off an annual infusion of $1 million the city had counted on from a 4 perccent tax on medical cannabis dispensaries’ receipts. So far, the city has collected $280,000 in voter-approved dispensary taxes.

Even though it’s halting the permitting process, the city will continue to tax medical cannabis dispensaries — not just the four dispensaries that have been issued permits (Fruitridge Health & Wellness, All About Wellness, El Camino Wellness and Unity Non Profit Collective) but all the dispensaries whose long-term business prospects are threatened while their operating permits are in limbo.

Besides uncertainty over federal actions, including threats to seize properties of landlords who lease to dispensaries or medical cannabis cultivators, the Bee notes that cities are concerned about an Oct. 4 ruling by the state’s 2nd District Court of Appeal.

The court ruled that Long Beach’s dispensary plan –- with permitting rules similar to Sacramento’s -– was an “obstacle” to federal drug law. The ruling departed from an earlier decision, by the state’s 4th District Court of Appeal, that the city of Anaheim couldn’t simply use federal law as grounds for banning dispensaries.

The Long Beach ruling came down the same day Eureka stood up to a letter from U.S. Northern District Attorney Melinda Haag, who wrote to say that her department was concerned about Eureka’s “creation of a licensing scheme that permits large-scale industrial marijuana cultivation, processing and distribution.” As the Times-Standard reports, the warned that if Eureka were to proceed with licensing dispensaries under the ordinance, the U.S. Attorney’s Office would consider taking action, including pursuing injunctions, fines, criminal prosecutions and forfeitures.

The Eureka city council, in its Oct. 4 vote, said it would stay the course in the face of this threat. The council now says it voted before it heard the news of the Long Beach ruling. Now that it’s heard the news, the city council wants more discussion on the issue.

“Had that information been placed before us (on Oct. 4), the discussion probably would have turned a different way,” councilman Newman said.

Some legal observers say the Long Beach ruling throws many cities’ ordinances into question.

“That damned U.S. attorney,” one Sacramento dispensary operator told the Bee. “He just scares the heck out of these people.”

Dear Landlord: Please Dismiss Your Dispensary, and Maybe Cough Up Your Property. Thanks, The Feds.

BY ED MURRIETA

One of my contacts in Redding sent me a copy of a letter his dispensary’s landlord received from US Attorney Benjamin Wagner, a little reminder that the government can, could and just maybe will seize the property of citizens in the feds’ war on medical cannabis.

My contact said the landlord offered to sell the building to the dispensary. Stay tuned for real estate news.

Here’s the US Attorney’s letter. It appears to be a digital image of a fax. Redactions appear to be Photoshopped, not done with one of the federal government’s brown markers.  Click on the images to view them full size.


Continue reading

U.S. Atttorney Calls Pot Ads Illegal, Signals Crackdown on Newspapers, Radio and TV

One U.S. Attorney says medical cannabis ads like those in this Sacramento News & Review publication, are illegal.

The federal government’s pot pogrom is about to extend to the Fourth Estate — targeting newspapers, radio stations and other media outlets that carry advertisements for medical cannabis dispensaries, California Watch reports.

U.S. Attorney Laura E. Duffy, whose district includes Imperial and San Diego counties, said medical cannabis advertising is the next area she’s “going to be moving onto as part of the enforcement efforts in Southern California.” Duffy said she could not speak for the three other U.S. attorneys covering the state but noted their efforts have been coordinated so far.

“I’m not just seeing print advertising,” Duffy said. “I’m actually hearing radio and seeing TV advertising. It’s gone mainstream. Not only is it inappropriate – one has to wonder what kind of message we’re sending to our children – it’s against the law.”

Duffy said she could not speak for the three other U.S. attorneys covering the state but noted their efforts have been coordinated so far.

In Northern California, medical cannabis advertising has been a boon to many newspapers, particularly weekly newspapers like Sacramento’s News & Review, which earlier this year launched a special section just for medical cannabis advertising. The region’s leading daily newspaper, the Sacramento Bee, started its own medical cannabis advertising section in September. (Disclosure: Pot Appetit  is a paid content contributor to the Bee’s medical cannabis advertising section.)  Channel 40, a Fox affiliate, runs commercials for medical cannabis dispensaries.

Federal law prohibits people from placing ads for illegal drugs, including marijuana, in “any newspaper, magazine, handbill or other publication.” The law could conceivably extend to online ads; the U.S. Department of Justice recently extracted a $500 million settlement from Google for selling illegal ads linking to online Canadian pharmacies.

Duffy said her effort against TV, radio or print outlets would first include “going after these folks with … notification that they are in violation of federal law.” She noted that she also has the power to seize property or prosecute in civil and criminal court.

William G. Panzer, an attorney who specializes in marijuana defense cases, said publishers may have a reason to worry. Federal law singles out anyone who “places” an illegal ad in a newspaper or publication. Nevertheless, Panzer said he is not aware of a single appellate case dealing with this section of the law.

“Technically, if I’m running the newspaper and somebody gives me money and says, ‘Here’s the ad,’ I’m the one who is physically putting the ad in my newspaper,” he said. “I think this could be brought against the actual newspaper. Certainly, it’s arguable, but the statute is not entirely clear on that.”

In the federal law, an exception is made for ads that advocate the use of illegal drugs but don’t explicitly offer them for sale or distribution. Newspapers, Panzer said, could argue that they have a right under the First Amendment to run the ads, and any “prior restraint” before publication is itself illegal.

Duffy said she believes the law gives her the right to prosecute newspaper publishers or TV station owners.

“If I own a newspaper … or I own a TV station, and I’m going to take in your money to place these ads, I’m the person who is placing these ads,” Duffy said. “I am willing to read (the law) expansively and if a court wants to more narrowly define it, that would be up to the court.”

Ngaio Bealum, editor of West Coast Cannabis, said he receives a significant portion of his revenue from dispensary ads. Bealum said it was “misguided for the Department of Justice to come after people who are following state law and doing well for the economy in a recession.”

Jeff vonKaenel, CEO and majority owner of the Sacramento News & Review, said he was “stunned by that interpretation of the First Amendment.” He said his publications “receive quite a bit of revenue from (dispensaries) and it would have a detrimental impact” if he was forced to stop publishing the ads.

What the federal government doesn’t claim, Sacramento County will. Already, nine medical cannabis dispensaries that regularly purchased advertising in Sacramento newspapers have closed and no longer purchase ads – quarter-page ads starting about $500, full-page ads from $1,500 to $2,000 each.

 

More Medical Cannabis Dispensaries Close in Sacramento County’s Assault on Pot


Auburn Health & Organics on Auburn Boulevard.

BY ED MURRIETA

A former Assistant U.S. Attorney speaking in favor of the federal government’s pot pogrom said recently that a letter from the U.S. Attorney warning medical cannabis dispensaries and the landlords who rent to them is a good thing.

“This letter is the best news that marijuana growers have ever received from the federal government because this letter is a courtesy that most people don’t get,” Bill Portanova said.

In the courtesy vein, but on the opposite side of the battle, Auburn Health & Organics, one of scores of medical cannabis dispensaries operating without the required business and zoning permits that Sacramento County refuses to issue in the first place, is giving its patients (along with the county and federal forces counting scalps) the courtesy of a heads-up: It’ll close Nov. 15, another casualty in the $1 million war that the Board of Supervisors borrows to finance.

So far,  here’s an unofficial tally of confirmed closures:

Sunnyfields.

One Solution.

City of Trees.

California Holistic Care.

Fort Kush.

The Reserve.

Citizen Collective.

PACC Group.

All-Natural Solutions.

PACC Group on Auburn Boulevard.

The sign on the door at Fort Kush on Florin Road.

The sign you see from Florin Road may need updating.

For more pictures, click here.

Owner of Sunnyfields Dispensary, a U.S. Marines Combat Veteran, Cedes a Battle to Sacramento County but Soldiers On

Johnny Zonneveld, a Marines combat veteran who uses medical cannabis to fight post-traumatic stress disorder,addressed the Carmichael planning council in July. Photo by Patch.com

BY ED MURRIETA

With more than $5,000 in code violations and the threatened closure of two adacent businesses, Johnny Zonneveld conceded a skirmish in Sacramento County’s war on medical cannabis dispensaries and closed Sunnyfields Collective on Thursday.

Sunnyfields joins One Solution, City of Trees, California Holistic Care, Citizen Collective, The Reserve, PACC Group and Fort Kush among the confirmed casualties in the $1 million war that Sacramento County is borrowing to wage on medical cannabis dispensaries, jobs and tax revenue be damned.

Now hold on to irony. The case of  Johnny Zonneveld, a U.S. Marine combat veteran who uses medical cannabis to battle post-traumatic stress disorder and the events leading up to the closure of a medical cananbis dispensary that serves more than 200 military veterans who also suffer from PTSD, is about to sound like a 21st century Catch-22:

Zonneveld was fined, on zoning violations, for operating a type of business that Sacramento County does not recognize and will not permit.

“In violation of operating a medical cannabis dispensary,” Zonneveld said. “Non-permitted use, basically. Nusiance.”

Then Zonneveld was fined, on building code violations, when he constructed a wall inside the dispensary without a permit from the county, which would not issue such a permit to a business that does not already have a permit to operate as a legally recognized business.

Zonneveld recalled his trip to Sacramento County’s building department.

“I wanted a permit to construct a wall,” he said.

“The guy from the county said, ‘What’s your use?’

“I told him straight-up what I was doing.

“He said, ‘You’re never gonna get that approved.’

“I said, OK, I’ll take the fines for the walls.”

After fines topped $5,000, Zonneveld retreated.

“I couldn’t pay my employees,” he said. “We just couldn’t stay open.”

The liquor store and the tattoo parlor at this Fair Oaks Boulevard address remain in business. The medical cannabis dispensary closed.

Zonneveld threw his 8-month-old medical cannabis dispensary on a grenade. The survivors include a tattoo parlor and a liquor store in a ramshackle 1950s-era strip mall.

“It’s partially why I decided not to mess with the county,” Zonneveld said. “There are two other businessiness there. Basically, if you have a building code violation in a building, they can close that building down because it’s considered a safety hazard.  The landlord wasn’t willing to fix the different things that are wrong with the building, and the county wouldn’t approve the permit for me to get things up to code.”

Zonneveld, who served in the Marines infantry and performed tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2000 to 2004, is preparing a new front:

Sunnyfields Collective, Zonneveld said, will continue to dispense medical cannabis to qualified patients — but only by appointment and only to existing patients or to new patients who are referred by existing patients.

“We have a private location that members can come to,” Zonneveld said. “But we’re not advertising we have a storefront. We’re not advertising as a delivery service either.”

Zonneveld says he’s not deterred by the county’s response.

“I don’t really care what the hell the county thinks of it now,” Zonneveld said. “I’m not doing this for the county. I’m doing this for the people who need cannabis.”

As for the county?

“Basically, they’re telling me what I’m doing is wrong or illegal yet Prop. 215 passed in 1996 and 15 years after the law actually passed they still don’t have an ordinance written. That means they haven’t done their job,” Zonneveld said. “If anybody should get any kind of fine for doing something illegal, it should be the county Board of Supervisors for not doing their jobs, for not doing what the voters actually voted for.”

Sunnyfields Collective
sunnyfieldsgrow.org
916-572-7213

Pictures of Pot Dispensaries Past: Closures in Sacramento County

Closed: The Reserve on Fulton Avenue.

Closed: Citizen Collective on El Camino Avenue. Those cards taped beneath the closed signs at both Citizen Collective and The Reserve are a classy touch touting Touch of Earth, a dispensary on Auburn Boulevard.

Closed: Only one of the businesses at this Fair Oaks Boulevard address closed — Sunnyfields Collective.

Closed: California Holistic Care on Fair Oaks Boulevard, not far from the former Sunnyfields.

Unofficial Body Count: These four dispensaries join  City of Trees, formerly on Fair Oaks Boulevard, and One Solution on Madison Avenue among the casualties on the building code enforcement front in Sacramento County’s war on medical cannabis dispensaries.

Ganja Today, Gone Tomorrow: Dispensary Darwinism and Political Pot Pogroms in Sacramento

A sign of things to come? On the door at One Solution in Sacramento.

BY ED MURRIETA

Once upon a time, when I was a restaurant critic in a second city in a bad economy, I chased restaurants — the delayed openings, the quick closures, the inspections in between, the cooks who served good food vs. the operators in it for a buck. It put a taste in my mouth.

Today, in the state capital of medical cannabis in an even worse economy, I spend a lot of time chasing medical cannabis dispensaries — not the ones that advertise themselves openly and regularly in Sacramento’s newspapers, keep regular hours of operation and work hard to make themselves part of the Camellia City’s community, but the ones that don’t advertise themselves to the public, or maybe do once or twice to mark turf and then disappear, maybe belly-up unsuccessful or maybe high-tailed underground; sometimes, there is no telling.

Medical cannabis directories — from online sources like Weedmaps and Sticky Guide to magazines like Kush and West Coast Cannabis, and even some pages of Pot Appetit that need housekeeping — are dotted with the littered listings of dispensaries no longer in operation for reasons legal or extra-legal. After visiting all of the dispensaries in Pot Appetit’s listings at least once to verify that they are in business, I now spend at least one day a week doing drive-bys: As I hear reports of closures, I visit locations. Some days I cruise around looking for “open” signs with the hope of debunking rumors.

The reality is this:

More medical cannabis dispensaries will close, disappear, cease to exist.

The market is saturated in Sacramento — 39 in the city and, depending on which source or rumor or day of the week you can cite, there are anywhere from 50 to 70 dispensaries in Sacramento County.

While the city of Oakland just received $360,000 in tax payments from hugely successful and highly visible Harborside dispensary, the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors is willing to borrow money in a million-dollar effort to close dispensaries. Already, One Solution and City of Trees have fallen. Wait for more, and more after that if the U.S. Attorney starts seizing property from landlords who rent to dispensaries.

Some medical cannabis dispensaries are fantastic. They offer great medicine at good prices. Some treat their patients as well as Nordstrom and Les Schwab treat their customers. And many, like now-shuttered One Solution, which donated backpacks with classroom supplies to schoolchildren, participate in community events.

In no particular order (and with apologies to any good dispensaries I overlook here in my quest to keep this paragraph pithy), I tip my bong to: The Farmers Market, Grass, El Camino Wellness, Arcade Wellness, Fruitridge Health and Wellness, All About Wellness, 1 Love, Unity, Northstar, River City Wellness, Alternative Medical Source, The Green Door, Magnolia Wellness, Nor-Cali Creations, MediZen and whatever name the former Mary Jane’s Wellness adopts after it was sold after the federal government seized money from its bank account, alleging the dispensary tried to hide profits.

Drug den is a gross overstatement describing the worst dispensaries. However, thug den aptly applies to a handful.

I had a discussion recently with an operator of a dispensary in Midtown Sacramento. We compared his dispensary to another dispensary nearby. That dispensary, he said, serves 5 times the number of patients he serves in a day. That dispensary, we agreed, has a better location — greater visibility, parking, nearby public transportation. Still, he said, he couldn’t understand why the other dispensary is more successful. Then the dispensary operated allowed, “Maybe I need to offer better medicine.”

There you go:

Dispensary Darwinism dawning.

Local politicians and the federal government will pick at the remainder.

Meanwhile, I’ve got a taste in my mouth that the skunkiest sativa can’t cure.

Whack-A-Pot: Feds Threaten Property Seizures; IRS Hounds Harborside; Eureka Snubs Fed Threat; Carnival Vibe in Sacramento County

BY ED MURRIETA

“Kind of like Whack-A-Mole.”

That’s the assessment of Sacramento TV newsman George Warren, who’s on top of medical cannabis law enforcement coverage these days. Last night on News10, Warren reported that the federal government is threatening to seize the property of landlords who rent to medical cannabis dispensaries.

Warren’s report is based on a letter from the U.S. Attorney in San Francisco regarding dispensaries in that city.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Sacramento told News10 that the feds intend to contact Sacramento landlords.

This federal action follows asset seizures from the bank accounts of two Sacramento dispensaries that the federal government alleges made suspicious cash deposits in order to elude banking regulations. In an unrelated federal case, the former owners of a South Sacramento dispensary are accused of running a criminal operation, a story News10 broke last month.

News10′s posted video makes brief mention of the tax ups and downs of Harborside, the Oakland dispensary that is arguably the nation’s most successful and highest-profile medical cannabis dispensary. In the same week that Harborside wrote a check that infused $360,483 into the City of Oakland’s tax coffers — the payment was for a 5 percent cannabis tax that was approved by 80 percent of Oakland’s voters last year — the Internal Revenue Service said Harborside cannot claim business deductions that are available to virtually every other business in America — standard-claim things like employee payroll and health care deductions. The IRS will only allow Harborside to deduct the cost of cannabis and the cost of its patient-wellness services, such as yoga. The IRS wants $2.5 million from Harborside.

In denying the standard business deductions, the IRS points to a provision in the tax law intended to kill illegal drug operations. The federal government, of course, recognizes no medical value in cannabis and considers cannabis illegal. Harborside says the deduction denials will kill its business model. California law, as per voter-approved Prop. 215, allows medical cannabis.

Meanwhile in Humboldt County, the Eureka City Council essentially shrugged off federal threats last night and make only minor revisions to its medical marijuana ordinance, rather than approving an emergency moratorium on dispensaries within city limits. This, after the council asked the U.S. Attorney’s Office about the legality of its medical marijuana ordinance, inviting the feds’ obvious response.

Meanwhile, Sacramento County code-enforcement inspectors are visiting medical cannabis dispensaries. Some dispensaries are now out of business on building code violations. While the county borrows more than $1 million to shut down dispensaries, there’s still a county ordinance kicking around. Dispensaries, their lawyers and their lobbyists have presented their cases to the county in a series of stakeholder meetings. The dispensary discussion has now been dispersed among 14 community action committees throughout the county. Those committees will hear input from the community and dispensaries before making a recommendation to the county board of supervisors, which is busy feeding $1 million into something resembling an arcade game while Oakland collects $360,483 in tax revenue from just one dispensary.

Yes, it is kind of like Whack-A-Mole, wherein no matter how swiftly or righteously the hammer hits, something pops up somewhere else.

The sign on the door at the former One Solution in Sacramento County.

Crackdown: Closure, Asset Seizures, a Dispensary Sold

BY ED MURRIETA

Like the sign says, City of Trees, a medical marijuana dispensary in Carmichael, shut down. Farther down Fair Oaks Boulevard, California Holistic Care is empty, with a for-rent sign in the window. One Solution on Madison shut too.

In addition to closures (and rumors, oh, of course, rumors) of closures, I hear reports of dispensaries that are being fined for code violations, with the county intent on shuttering the 50-plus dispensaries that are operating in a Catch-22: permitted to exist by state law but denied local business permits because the county doesn’t recognize medical marijuana dispensaries and therefore doesn’t issue business licenses for dispensaries.

I visited The Farmers Market, off Bradshaw Road in Sacramento County, on Thursday for a scheduled appointment, which was delayed by a visit from county code enforcement inspectors, who left without any apparent action.

Meanwhile, the federal government seized the bank accounts of 1 Love Wellness in Sacramento and Mary Jane’s Wellness in Gold River, alleging the dispensaries made improper bank deposits to elude federal banking regulations. Following the asset seizure, the owner of Mary Jane’s sold the dispensary, now run with just the sign “Wellness” noting its existence.

The Farmers Market’s Shake ‘N’ Bake Gives Your Bud More Bang

Coat it with kief: Doing the Shake 'N' Bake at The Farmers Market medical marijuana dispensary in Sacramento.

BY ED MURRIETA

The baggie containing brown, powdery cannabis was marked Shake ‘N’ Bake. I asked if that’s the dispensary’s culinary blend — perhaps for a batch of pot-crusted pork chops.

“It’s kief,” the cannabis consultant at The Farmers Market said. “Throw your bud in, coat it with kief. Ten bucks for any eighth, five bucks for any gram you buy.”

The consultant said one patient did the Shake ‘N’ Bake with an eighth of marijuana buds and went home with 6 grams total — 2 grams of Shake ‘N’ Bake kief coating his 4 grams of marijuana bud like cocoa powder clinging to chocolate truffles.

The concept is simple and similar to what bartenders who serve alcohol do: float a shot of liqueur over a cocktail to increase its appeal and potency. Coating marijuana flowers with a concentrated form of marijuana puts more bang in your bud. Continue reading

The Pen is Mightier Than the Bong, or Mini Vaporizers Got the Right Stuff

It's a pen. It's a vaporizer. It's the latest way to inhale.


BY ED MURRIETA

Much like science and technology have fed molecular gastronomy to the point that home cooks can extract not just the flavors of food but the essence of food, advances in medical marijuana paraphernalia help patients extract and enjoy the vaporized essence of cannabis — the cleanest, most effective and least harmful way of “smoking” pot.

Vaporizing is not smoking — it’s vaporizing, extracting pure vapor at a certain temperature range and leaving behind the parts of the plant or plant extract that, when burned, create tar and other toxic compounds. Vaporizing is the preferred method of inhaling cannabis for patients with respiratory issues that prevent them from smoking; for patients who do not want to create detectable smoke when they medicate; and for anyone who wants to get a high percentage of cannabinoids from their cannabis.

Whether the vaporizer is the size of a fountain pen or the size of a kitchen appliance, the principle of vaporization is as easy as A-B-C and produces a substance loaded with THC:

Cannabis — whether in the form of whole or ground flower, or in a concentrated form such as hashish, hashish oil or hashish wax — is vaporized through contact with a heated surface or with forced air, protecting the cannabis from direct flame and releasing the plant’s resinous, essential oils in vapor that’s breathed directly from the vaporizer unit, through a tube connected to the vaporizer or from a balloon filled by the vaporizer. Continue reading

But Carmichael Pot Shops Already Spruce Up ‘Blighted’ Suburban Road

Paradise Wellness is among least ugly businesses fronting Fair Oaks Boulevard in Carmichael.

BY ED MURRIETA

Sacramento County Board of Supervisors have given their unanimous but tentative approval for a plan to beautify a 1-mile stretch of suburban thoroughfare that has the dubious honor of being dubbed the ugliest street in Sacramento (gotcha, Sacramento Tree Foundation), littered with a hodgepodge of discount stores, fast-food outlets and auto lube stations.

“I’m really tired of driving down Fair Oaks Boulevard and seeing so much blight,” one area resident told the board.

I suggest that resident remove her blight blinders and take a closer look at the 1-mile stretch of Fair Oaks Boulevard that everyone wants to spruce up: It’s home to three medical marijuana dispensaries, revenue-generating businesses that the board of supervisors is intent on spending a lot of money to shut down.

Paradise Wellness, City of Trees Compassionate Care and Foothill Wellness are in that 1-mile stretch targeted for a redesign and redevelopment that county planners say will create areas for pedestrians and bicyclists in an area that’s mostly commercial.

Paradise Wellness, in a sleek, 5,000-square-foot glass-front building that’s landscaped just as well as Paradise’s bud’s are trimmed, is located next do a do-it-yourself car wash. Foothill Wellness is near auto repair businesses. City of Trees is across the road in a nondescript strip mall.

Just beyond the 1-mile stretch of Fair Oaks Boulevard are three more dispensaries, California Holistic Collective, Kris’ Corner and Sunnyfields, all of which were deemed bikeable in a recent Pedaling for Pot report on Pot Appetit.

When I ride or drive by any and all of these dispensaries, I don’t see blight — I see bud and the green revenue it brings to a county that’s willing to spend a million dollars to put them and other dispensaries out of business.
View Larger Map

A
Paradise Wellness, 6240 Fair Oaks Blvd.
B
City of Trees Compassionate Care, 6743 Fair Oaks Blvd.
C
Foothill Wellness, 6828 Fair Oaks Blvd.

See Pot Appetit’s complete directory of medical marijuana dispensaries in Carmichael.

Feds Want Sacramento Men Who Sought ‘as Great a Profit as Possible’ from Pot


Bryan Smith, left, and dad Kelly Smith.

BY ED MURRIETA

A marijuana investigation that began in February with what local law enforcement calls an anonymous tip bloomed into a federal case when criminal charges against six Sacramento men were unsealed Thursday.

An affidavit signed by a Drug Enforcement Adminstration special agent charges that the owners of the former R&R Wellness and their associates “were involved in growing marijuana for the purpose of selling it at as great a profit as possible.”

California’s medical marijuana law mandates that dispensaries operate as nonprofit patient organizations. State criminal charges are pending againt the six men following their arrest in June when Elk Grove police busted a marijuana-growing operation that allegedly stole $80,000 of electric power from the Sacramento Municipal Utility District.

According to the federal affidavit dated Sept. 12 and unsealed Thursday, state criminal charges will be dropped once the U.S. Attorney’s Office files its case, in which the defenants could face 40-year prison terms. Continue reading

Unity Puts Heart and Feet into the Community

Sandra Yuhre gets Unity Non-Profit Collective into the community.

BY ED MURRIETA

The patients at Unity Non-Profit Collective are not just people who suffer from breast cancer, diabetes and other conditions treatable with medical marijuana. They are, in fact, patients who help finance medical research into those conditions.

Unity and its patient-members raise money through events like the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure ($3,000 raised in May) and the upcoming Step Out Walk to Stop Diabetes on Sept. 25. Unity’s patients are joined and supported in these events by friends and family members who are not medical marijuana patients.

“We’re compassionate about what goes on in the community, even if some community members don’t want to see us be successful,” said Sandra Yuhre, Unity’s community outreach director, herself a breast cancer survivor whose medical marijuana of choice is tincture.

A $1 raffle for a foot-long pre-rolled joint recently raised more than $300 for Dr. Mollie Fry, the El Dorado County cannabis doctor currently serving prison time on federal charges.

Last year, Unity did a clothes-and-food drive for poor kids. That was a huge success. When crooks stole cash, clothes and food mid-way into the drive, Unity’s patients — and a bunch of non-patients — rallied and donated anew.

Currently, Unity is holding a school-supplies drive for low-income kids.

Unity Non-Profit Collective
1832 Tribute Road Suite E, (916) 564-1824

Mary Jane’s Wellness: $10 Grams, Roll-Your-Own Jack Balls and a Retail Buzz on Sunrise

Jack Balls at Mary Jane's Wellness: Jack Herer Buds, Jack Herer hash oil and Jak Herer kief

BY ED MURRIETA

Big, bright, clean and staffed by friendly budtenders who do their homework, Mary Jane’s Wellness does customer-service right — serious like a jewelry store, with a little frivolity of a candy store.

All of Mary Jane’s marijuana is advertised as top-shelf and goes for $10 a gram, about $3 to $5 less expensive for similar-looking sativas, indicas and hybrids elsewhere.

Mary Jane’s is the only dispensary in the Sacramento area rolling Jack Balls, a do-it-yourself experience not unlike a yogurt shop where you pour your yogurt and pile on your own toppings.

In a corner of the dispensary where Mary Jane’s displays its concentrates, patients can roll dried marijuana buds in thick, condensed hash oil, then coat the oily buds in kief, the dusty, finely grou­nd particles of marijuana flower.

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Pot Appetit Interview: Michael Backes of Abatin Wellness — Montel’s Medical Marijuana Joint

Like TV talk host and pitchman Montel Williams,
Michael Backes is a consultant to
Abatin Wellness of Sacramento.

BY ED MURRIETA

I interviewed Michael Backes of Abatin Wellness in Sacramento this week. Backes is a veteran of both the Los Angeles medical marijuana dispensary scene and Hollywood’s film industry. For just over an hour, we talked about Abatin Wellness; the role research plays in the dispensary’s operation; business practices of dispensaries; the science of edibles; foods that may enhance cannabinoids’ effects; Hollywood celebrities and marijuana; and, of course, Montel Williams, the TV talk show host/pitchman and medical marijuana user who consults with Abatin. This is the unedited audio.
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Visit 1 Love Dispensary in Sacramento, Say ‘Ed Murrieta Sent Me,’ and Help Poor People Get Free Medicine

BY ED MURRIETA

Word of mouth — friends telling friends about a store or a service – is one of the best ways of bringing in new customers. When the mouth that speaks the words is rewarded, everyone wins.

That’s pretty much the experience of medical marijuana dispensaries’ patient referral programs. Refer a new patient, get a free something-something.

Sacramento’s 1 Love Wellness offers free house joints to patients who refer new patients.

“Tell everyone you know,” a 1 Love budtender told me today. “Bring in 10 people, get 10 joints. Bring in 1,000 people, get 1,000 joints. You don’t even need to be here. Just have your friends tell us your name.”

He showed me a house joint: Priced at $6, it weighed 1.4 grams. The budtender said it was rolled from crumbled bud and dusty bits from the bottoms of mid-range medicine jars.

So here’s the deal:

I need 1,000 of you to visit 1 Love as first-time patients. Say, “Ed Murrieta sent me.” I’ll donate every one of those free joints to poor people who need medicine.

1 Love Wellness
1841 El Camino Ave., Sacramento

A Is for Abatin, but Click M for Montel Williams, Medical Marijuana and Ed Murrieta’s Request

Montel Williams suffers from MS and smokes marijuana to combat pain.

BY ED MURRIETA

According to Pot Appetit’s traffic stats, Montel Williams and the medical marijuana dispensary he’s opened in Sacramento and the one he wants to open in Washington, DC, are popular.

And why not?

First off, as one bald-headed, dark-skinned, sexy medical pot smoker, I must say: Yeah, Montel’s one sexy, bald-headed, dark-skinned medical pot smoker, and who wouldn’t want to visit his dispensary?

Journalistically, it’s a great story: a celebrity who suffers from a debilitating disease and who uses medical marijuana to treat what corporate pharmaceuticals can’t touch is standing up and speaking out for something people went to jail for not that long ago.

Montel’s joint — and I mean joint in the respectful Spike Lee Joint way, not the pot-and-paper smoking way as there are no pre-rolls in Montel’s joint — is, as one wag put it, the “Taj Mahal” of dispensaries, an upscale pot palace that’s more medically minded and aesthetically pleasing than any dispensary I’ve experienced from California to Canada.

The pot’s priced $3.40 a gram for 5 grams ($17) — and promised to be top-shelf. That’s like buying a new Mercedes for the price of Kia. There’s a catch: There’s a $45 joining fee (fully refundable at any time), plus there’s a $40 evaluation fee each subsequent visit to cover the cost of staff counselors who help patients track and evaluate their conditions, their medicine and their use, so that brings the cost of 5 grams of Abatin bud to roughly $60 with tax, on par with 5-gram eighths elsewhere.

Everyone from California’s capital to the nation’s capital wants to know about Montel Williams, pot and Abatin, and every one’s Googling and talking about Montel, pot and Abatin. (And if they’re not, they’re interested in Matthew Coleman, the environmentalist murdered in pot-growing country.)

I had a meeting scheduled on Tuesday with Michael Backes, one of Abatin’s principals, that ended up getting postponed, but before that, I’d taken a meeting with Sacramento Bee advertising executives about the newspaper’s new upscale medical marijuana advertising section, which debuts in today’s printed Ticket section, with Pot Appetit content among the ads. Naturally, talk turned to Montel Williams.
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