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Marijuana dispensaries in California sell marijuana to clients who are legally allowed to purchase it because of California Proposition 215 (1996). Marijuana dispensaries are often referred to as "pot shops."
Observers disagree about how many marijuana dispensaries are open and doing business in California, with estimates ranging from 500-1,000:
Marijuana dispensaries "sell marijuana and its concentrated resin forms, hashish and kif, sometimes alongside a range of enticing, non-inhaled alternatives, including marijuana-imbued brownies, cookies, gelati, honeys, butters, cooking oils (“Not So Virgin” olive oil), bottled cold drinks (“enhanced” lemonade is the most popular), capsules, lozenges, spray-under-the-tongue tinctures and even topically applied salves."[3]
What some are calling a "Walmart for Weed" opened in Oakland, California on January 28, 2010. The store, called IGrow, is a 15,000 square-foot warehouse that is said by its owner to meet every conceivable need of the marijuana horticulturist and medical marijuana consumer, except the sale of seedlings, which can only be sold at dispensaries. 25-year-old Dhar Mann owns the marijuana emporium. The store's grand opening ceremony was attended by 3 members of Oakland's City Council.[4][5][6]
The New York Times coined a term in its January 1, 2010 edition for those who have become wealthy through trading in medical marijuana: the "Ganja Riche."[7]
The paper writes, "...according to insiders who asked not to be identified for fear of being singled out by the authorities, medical marijuana can be a remarkably lucrative business, especially in the San Francisco region, where zoning laws severely restrict the number of marijuana clubs. There are an estimated 1,000 in Los Angeles — more dispensaries than public schools, in fact — but only about 50 in the Bay Area. Less competition means that medicinal marijuana is, for some, an especially enriching shade of green."[7]
Tim Patriarca, the executive director of the last hospice in California that cares exclusively for people dying from AIDS, started asking the "Ganja Riche" for donations to fund his hospice when he noticed that "They were making money with no tradition of giving." Some marijuana clubs now give his hospice as much as $20,000 a year.[7]
Steve DeAngelo, the owner of Harborside Health Center and president of CannBe, does not use the word "marijuana," preferring "cannabis." He says, "We want to make it safe, seemly and responsible....If we can’t demonstrate professionalism and legitimacy, we’re never going to gain the trust of our citizens. And without that trust, we’re never going to get where we need to go."[13]
Dr. Tod Mikuriya, a psychiatrist, compiled a list of about 250 conditions that can, in his view, appropriately be treated with marijuana. The list includes:

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced in 2009 that federal agents will only target marijuana distributors who violate both federal and state laws. Since medical marijuana is legal in California, Holder's remarks were interpreted by some to mean that federal agents would not prosecute medical marijuana in California.[2]
Holder said, "It will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana, but we will not tolerate drug traffickers who hide behind claims of compliance with state law to mask activities that are clearly illegal."[14]
Bruce Mirken of the Marijuana Policy Project praised Holder's decision, saying, "This is a major step forward. This change in policy moves the federal government dramatically toward respecting scientific and practical reality."[14]
The federal government launched a crackdown against California's marijuana dispensaries beginning in October 2011. The federal government has:
On April 2, 2012, federal agents with the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration raided Oaksterdam University.
According to a press report, "The doors...were blocked by U.S. marshals and yellow tape following the early morning raid...agents carted trash bags of unknown materials out of the school as protesters gathered to condemn the action. A museum connected to the school and a nearby medical marijuana dispensary operated by Oaksterdam founder Richard Lee also were raided."[16]
The home of Richard Lee was also raided.
Stephen Gutwillig, the director of the California branch of the Drug Policy Alliance, said, "Oakland has one of the most highly regulated systems for distributing medical marijuana in the state. We think this is a campaign by the U.S. attorneys not just to limit but to kill access to medical marijuana in California."[16]
Kevin Sabet, a former senior adviser to Barack Obama's drug czar, said, "This is a warning signal to any city including Oakland that they should tread very carefully when sanctioning an illegal activity. The brazenness of Oakland and other cities like this has actually made them a target."[16]
Some cities in California have adopted ordinances that say that businesses operating within city limits must comply with federal law as well as state and local laws as a way to keep marijuana-growing businesses out of their cities. For example, the city of Lindsay passed a medical marijuana ordinance in January 2006 that says, "Legal Use of Land: No use of land, under this title, shall be permitted within the City Limits if such use shall be in violation of any local, state or federal law."[17]
After the Purple Elephant opened as a pot club on the West End of Alameda in 2008, the City of Alameda revoked its business license and enacted an emergency ordinance to stop any other medical marijuana dispensaries from opening. The Alameda City Council has indicated that it is likely to adopt a permanent ordinance banning pot clubs in the city in early 2010.[18]
Long Beach enacted an ordinance regulating its medical dispensaries in August 2009. Long Beach has had least 39 dispensaries operating in it.[9]
On Tuesday, January 26, the Los Angeles City Council voted by 9-3 to cap the number of dispensaries in the city at 70. The city will allow the 186 dispensaries that are already registered to temporarily stay open. Pot shops that obtained a license in 2007 are grandfathered-in.[19][20]
A group of marijuana activists in the city attempted to collect enough signatures on a veto referendum to force a vote on the new law, but were unable to collect the signatures needed -- 27,425 -- in the time allowed.[22]
On April 30, 2010, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa signed an ordinance that will "shut hundreds of marijuana dispensaries in the city and impose stricter regulations on the 186 remaining stores." The measure caps the number of marijuana stores at 70, but allows 116 stores that registered before November 13, 2007 to stay in business. Each store has to pay an annual licensing fee of $1,595.[23]
The "Sacramento News & Review" published a 32-page insert in their April 15, 2010 edition about marijuana shops in Sacramento. The insert included a two-page color map ("The Marijuana Map"). According to the insert, there are at least 46 marijuana dispensaries in Sacramento, 8 businesses that sell hydroponic supplies for those who prefer to grow their own, and 9 doctors/clinics who are known to write prescriptions for marijuana.[24]
In April 2010, San Joaquin County supervisors voted to extend a temporary ban on marijuana stores in the county's unincorporated areas.[24]
Pedro Nava, a member of the California General Assembly, called on November 30, 2009 for investigations into marijuana dispensaries in Santa Barbara. Nava wrote, "...how did the City of Santa Barbara become just one of 35 cities ... in the entire state that allow illegal store front marijuana dispensaries and permits them near schools and sober recovery facilities? ...This is about a situation that has spiraled out of control and threatens the fabric and quality of life for Santa Barbara families...Is there anyone who can say with a straight face that the anonymous cash register clerk with no connection to the patient, other than taking their money, can satisfy the spirit and letter of the law? Or that the selling of marijuana that goes on day after day in our city isn’t for profit? Make no mistake, there are powerful interests and their allies promoting the pot trade and their motivation isn’t based on altruism. The City of Santa Barbara must put an immediate end to continuing violations of the law. Unfortunately, there were inadequate regulations and restrictions put in place to prevent the consequences of the proliferation of pot dispensaries. I urge you to implement a moratorium on any and all pending and future permits for marijuana dispensaries being considered by the City."[25]
On November 2, 2009, the City of West Hollywood passed an ordinance overhauling its medical marijuana dispensary law. The provisions of the new ordinance include:
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