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View Full Version : Pot Proposal Passes; Alcohol Plan Doesn't



Binky
11-09-2005, 10:57 AM
Ferndale, Michigan -- Light up, but don't drink up. Those were voters' verdicts in neighboring Ferndale and Oak Park.
A Ferndale proposal to allow the medical use of marijuana passed, 1,894-1,222. And a proposal in Oak Park to allow sales of alcohol by the glass, according to unofficial results, failed 3,184-1,869 with all but some of the absentee ballots counted.

With the passing of its proposal, Ferndale joins Detroit and Ann Arbor, which in 2004 approved allowing marijuana for medical use.

Such initiatives have been approved in 10 states, but not in Michigan, so the new measure flies in the face of state laws banning marijuana possession. Police, including Ferndale Chief Michael Kitchen, pledged to ignore such an ordinance and arrest anyone found with the drug.

"It basically just seems like a big waste of time to me," said Ferndale resident Michele Sibula, 44. "Does approving that mean that we're cool? I think that's the implication."

Proponents include a group called the Ferndale Coalition for Compassionate Care, led by University of Michigan sophomore Donal O'Leary III.

"I think people realize that this is a legitimate medical question," O'Leary said.

In Oak Park, voters shot down the proposal, which would have allowed businesses that made 50% of their profits from food sales to sell alcohol. The issue came up last year after the city acquired a portion of Royal Oak Township through a land- and tax-sharing agreement that had businesses with liquor licenses, including a karaoke bar, Royal Kubo, on Greenfield south of I-696. This vote means that Royal Kubo, the only business that still had a license before the election, will lose its liquor license.

Owner Armand Santos said he was surprised by the vote and now plans to move his business to another city.

"Karaoke without alcohol -- it doesn't go hand-in-hand," he said.

"We lost everything. We lost our livelihood."

Source: Detroit Free Press (MI)
Author: Gina Damron & Bill Laitner, Free Press Staff Writers
Published: November 9, 2005
Copyright: 2005 Detroit Free Press
Contact: letters@freepress.com
Website: http://www.freep.com/

Binky
11-09-2005, 11:00 AM
Police, including Ferndale Chief Michael Kitchen, pledged to ignore such an ordinance and arrest anyone found with the drug.:(

Merlin
11-09-2005, 11:35 AM
Police, including Ferndale Chief Michael Kitchen, pledged to ignore such an ordinance and arrest anyone found with the drug.:(


The war continues...... :confused:

mdanzig
11-09-2005, 05:14 PM
I used to hang around in this city. Crazy how it might pass Med-pot:)

lriv
11-09-2005, 05:24 PM
FUC* the police is what i say.....but my dad has a corporate lawyer at my families disposal...so it is easier for me to say..... If it is a law and you have your papers, then screw it take the cop to court tie it up in litigation for weeks and weeks and the freaking cops with think twice about doing it again.....loss of that paycheck would suck for them(cop)!!!!! screw them!!! especially when the county starts having to pay for the defendants legal fees when they police lose their case.....

There, if feel so much better!!!

Randall
11-09-2005, 05:33 PM
Never fear being 'cool' Ferndale;your young citizens tell us differently every weekend
they come to visit us in Windsor Ontario.They are very nice people,"COOL" even some of them.They must be related to those "CompassionateUse.....Ferndale"people.Their "Chief",however,seems more like a vigil