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Recession threatens to burn out pot clubs

By: Tamara Barak Aparton
Examiner Staff Writer
February 17, 2009

Business at The Green Cross medical marijuana dispensary has slowed due to the poor economy. (Cindy Chew/The Examiner)

SAN FRANCISCO — One might guess that tough economic times would only fuel the desire for mind-altering substances. For San Francisco’s cannabis clubs, however, nothing could be further from the truth.

The deepening economic crisis has hit the dispensaries hard, forcing the nonprofit collectives to cut staff, business hours and donations to charities.

Charlie Alazraie, manager of Bay Area Safe Alternatives, said business has dropped about 60 percent since summer, as the economy forces patients to buy smaller quantities. Alazraie had to let go of one full-time employee and two part-time workers at the small Western Addition collective.

Also halted were donations to soup kitchens and low-cost health clinics that serve many of BASA’s patients. The previously profitable collective was hit with a penalty last quarter after paying their sales tax late for the first time.

“This year we’re going to be so much in the red, I don’t want to find out. I know it’s going to be ugly,” Alazraie said. “We’re in arrears with our vendors, with architects, with everything.”

The collective has always had a commitment to provide free medical marijuana for those in impossible situations — people who are critically ill and living in poverty were subsidized with money set aside from sales. In the past, the number of people who qualified hovered around 36. Today, there are 60.

The recession hit right after many San Francisco pot clubs had spent tens of thousands of dollars to comply with legislation passed in 2005 requiring them to meet city permit regulations.

Kevin Reed, founder of the Green Cross, which delivers medical marijuana to patients in San Francisco, said his sales are down 25 percent in the past 40 days, and dropped 45 percent in the past two weeks.

To survive, the collective cut its hours and cut its 12 employees’ pay by $2 an hour.

“It’s amazing to me,” Reed said. “It’s an industry I never thought could be affected.”

Reed said he thought marijuana would be a recession-proof product, much like alcohol.

“I always heard that if the economy went bad, people would be depressed,” he said. “The whole theory got blown out the window for me.”

The cost of the pot hasn’t risen, but the $300-an-ounce price tag has become a heavy burden for people who have lost their jobs and cut back on expenses. Insurance does not cover medicinal marijuana.

“The only busy day we’ve had in the past 40 days is when we offered a one-third off discount for veterans,” Reed said. “It seemed like half the veterans in the state signed up.”

Green sector

The recession is weighing on medical pot sales in The City.

30 Known medical marijuana dispensaries (clubs and delivery services) in San Francisco

2 Known medical marijuana dispensaries (clubs and delivery services) in San Mateo

$103 Cost of state medical marijuana card

$300 Approximate cost of an ounce of medical marijuana

Sources: San Francisco Health Department, The Green Cross, sanfranciscocannabisclubs.com

tbarak@sfexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

bergesgarten

Feb 16, 2009

Maybe someday Cannabis will be decriminalized as it was until 1937. What a crime--Prohibition.

 

BongNumber

Feb 17, 2009

Since Pot club are allowed to operate w/o showing any accounting who knows if the claims of donating money to charities were substantial or just a few bucks for window dressing. Time to legalize marijuana and get rid of these drug monopolies.

 

Kevin

Feb 17, 2009

In recent articals: "The state attorney general issued a set of guidelines last year for medical marijuana clubs, including that they operate as nonprofits. San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom has proposed legislation to require that the clubs operate as nonprofits." (It Passed). "While many medical marijuana advocates support the nonprofit requirement, Atty Goggin and others said that it, combined with the cost associated with getting city permits, have resulted in a de facto moratorium on clubs. Others, however, said that the shuttering of some clubs means that the system is working."

 

elizabeth139

Feb 17, 2009

Ms Barak may find it amusing that poor, sick people can't afford a "mind altering substance," but let me assure you, that the sick, poor, and disabled are more in need of that than anyone. The reason that the clubs are going out of business is the greed of politicians and lawyers. Our former DA has been shaking down the clubs, telling them that if they pay him (according to one club owner) $50K, he will see to it that their permits pass. The shady "campaign contributions," and the parasitization of the clubs by various pimps, like ASA, NORML, "Axis of Love" etc just adds to the problem, and the main problem is that organized crime is not interested in seeing to it that sick folks get their medication. Or we would have been growing it ourselves all along. Yes, you can do it, I am doing it. The DEA knows, I told them, the police know, and no one cares. However, if we did things my way, the price would plummet, and of course, the drug thugs don't want that.

 

Pete

Feb 17, 2009

It's a shame the Green Cross is feeling the squeeze in this recession. I Don't expect to hear that the pharmaceutical industry has suffered in this economic downturn. Yet the Green Cross, probably the most compassionate dispensary and certainly most law abiding in SF, has to restrict access to patients because of the meltdown we're in. Where is the economic stimulus package to sectors that actually care for people's well being?

 

bummer-dude

Feb 17, 2009

only reason marijuana is not recession proof, is because it is illegal, and there is a tax-payer money fueled war keeping it prohibited from profitable out comes. pretty lame when the gov't. tells you that you cannot consume, grow, and prosper with some thing that was here waaaaaay before the government was.

 

JohnDavies

Feb 17, 2009

Wow, I wouldnt mind working there! RT www.anon-tools.us.tc

 

RealCannabisPatient

Feb 18, 2009

Business is down b/c many people are simply not *real* patients! They are discretionary users, often young twenty-somethings who go to doctors like Hanya Barth who write recommendations for anyone who pays her exorbitant fee (which she charges annually). Prop 215 should be upheld - for patients.

 

Katje van Dijk

Apr 15, 2009

Alcohol would not be so recession proof either, if it cost $300 per ounce. C'mon people! Marijuana costs less to produce than broccoli, it now has a legal pathway to consumers, yet it's still priced as if it has been smuggled into the country from abroad . . . www.katjevandijk.com

 

estoo

May 12, 2009

I love this guy. He said. "Marijuana cost less to produce than broccoli" lol so broccoli boy tell me how much it cost to produce. Broccoli.how big Is your farm. And have you ever tryed smokin it?
I think you might have . If you are looking to produce medical grade medicine. You are buying thousands of dollars in equpment. Now talk about grow space room or outdoor in door you have enviromental controls lights pumps water electricity man houers. Testing equpment. Nuets
Light bulbes pest controls filters. How much broccoli do you have to sell to pay all that off..

 

Dec 19, 2009

lowongan kerja 2010 lowongan kerja bank lowongan kerja terbaru lowongan pekerjaan lowongan cpns lowongan pekerjaan terbaru internet marketing ferri yanto angelica faustina high paying keyword

 

mytiffany

Jan 25, 2010

The artists tiffanys create these imaginative tiffany co and striking works for their beauty and magic tiffany rings and to make people see the artwork's tiffany jewellery environment in new ways.

 


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