Yes,
this process needs volunteers and input both from those who are
interested as well as those who have previously worked on related
documents - we would love to see what you've come up with. Many
hands make light work, as the saying goes.
COLLECTIVE
GROUND
This
is the current draft of a generic collective agreement with standards
for cannabis patients & primary caregivers working collectively
together to adopt, adapt to their own situation, carry with them,
laminate & post as gardensite guidelines they will honor.
This
offering, in good faith from the medical cannabis community, intends
to comply with local and state law, as well as to honor good neighbor
policies and common courtesies.
MEDICAL
CANNABIS COLLECTIVE Association Agreement
I,
_______ _________, am a qualified patient, who uses cannabis as
medicine approved by my doctor under state law, the purpose being
"to enhance access of patients and caregivers to medical
marijuana through collective cooperative cultivation projects"
Health & Safety Code 11362.77 (Senate Bill 420, 2003), known
as the Medical Marijuana Program Act.
"Two or more patients/caregivers...may associate within the
State of California in order collectively or cooperatively to
cultivate marijuana for medical purposes." (H&S 11362.775).
I agree to work with the members of our association, Green Friends
(collective name),
in order to collectively cultivate cannabis for medical purposes
under state law,
to the benefit of each and for the good of the whole.
As contained in our collective agreement, I support the following
standards:
* to keep my Physician Approval updated and current,
with an additional authorization from the Doctor, if needed,
if the current standard (6 mature/8 immature plants/8 ounces of
bud)
is inadequate to meet the patient's medical needs.
* to post my Physician Approval and Collective Agreement at all
times,
either at the entrance door or in the garden or at both locations,
as a way of claiming compliance with state law on collectives
and discouraging law enforcement from entering the property,
if they see evidence of a good faith effort to comply,
such as a Collective Bulletin Board with all approvals posted.
* all cannabis medicine will be shared proportionately amongst
collective members
at low or no cost to each patient, based on an annual membership
fee
and time-share programs for meeting the broad needs of the membership.
* to share responsibility for the defense of the collective,
including with testimony and court support where necessary.
* to respect the garden environment,
to grow organically for the health of patients and the earth,
and to not damage or degrade the soil and streams with contaminants,
diesel spills, garbage, etc.
* to grow "mature flowering females" (SB420's definition
of medical grade cannabis)
in the amount "reasonably necessary" for patient members
of the collective,
taking into consideration that leaf/shake/trim/stem cannot be
legitimately calculated
in the total quantity for prosecution purposes.
* to secure the grow with a sturdy lockable gate or door to reduce
temptation and risk of break-ins and theft.
(This is flexible, since growers tend to apply site-specific common
sense requirements
treating large areas of land differently than small garden parcels
in residential neighborhoods.)
* to block visibility of the plants from any public sidewalk or
street with a fence, in order to prevent nuisance complaints.
* to block plant aromas from the public where possible, using
charcoal filters or ozone generators with indoor gardens,
so as not to annoy or otherwise negatively effect neighbors, resulting
in nuisance complaints.
* to discourage excessive or noisy road traffic that may be annoying
to neighbors, causing nuisance complaints.
* to not divert medical cannabis for non-medical purposes.
* to not engage in illegal water diversions.
* to not engage in illegal electrical diversions (bypass hook-ups).
* to not engage in trespass grows on private or public land.
GOOD
NEIGHBOR POLICY: The intent is one of mutual respect between neighbors;
to avoid adversarial positions; to treat others as one would like
to be treated; to keep an open mind; and be willing to cooperate
with neighbors with a goal of creating a safe and healthy neighborhood
environment." - MMMAB - The collective guidelines above were
created by qualified patient-growers based on rights and responsibilities,
rather than the standard law enforcement perspective based on
crime and punishment.
There
are no limits on the quantity of medicine or number of patients
permitted to participate in "collective cooperative cultivation"
with an adequate number of doctors' approvals. Rather, the limits
are defined as occurring within a membership association, with
a... "closed-circuit cycle of marijuana cultivation and consumption
with no purchases or sales to or from non-members."
The following are legal guidelines for collectives, quoted from
the August 2008 Attorney General Opinion regarding non-diversion
of medicine and enforcement of Senate Bill 420's protective purpose:
"to enhance access of patients and caregivers to medical
marijuana through collective cooperative cultivation projects".
* Medical marijuana patients and primary caregivers may "associate
within the State of California in order collectively or cooperatively
to cultivate marijuana for medical purposes." (11362.775)
* A collective is "an organization that...facilitates the
collaborative efforts of patients and caregiver members...and
transactions between members... including the allocation of costs
and revenues".
* Written membership applications, verifications and updates are
required of all patients or primary caregivers who wish to form
or join a collective and remain "in good standing".
* "Conditions of membership" are to be enforced "by
excluding members whose identification card or physician recommendation
are invalid or have expired, or who are caught diverting marijuana
for non-medical use."
* "Collectives should acquire marijuana only from their constituent
members (in order to) lawfully transport...or distribute to other
members of the collective."
* "Nothing allows marijuana to be purchased from outside
the collective for distribution to its members. Instead the cycle
should be a closed-circuit of marijuana cultivation and consumption
with no purchases or sales to or from non-members."
* "To help prevent diversion to non-medical markets, collectives
should document each member's contribution of labor, resources,
or money...(and) track and record the source of their marijuana."
" Collectives may cultivate and transport marijuana in aggregate
amounts tied to its membership numbers."
The Mendocino County Strauss-Maligno case tells the story of a
by-the-book true collective, growing in Mendo for a storefront
in LA, adhering to the AG Guidelines, convincing a jury that their
collective with hundreds of patients and a $1.4 million budget
was legitimately run and not to convict. The jury hung 7-5 in
favor of acquittal as the facts offered by the defense unfolded
and convinced the majority of jurors the defendants were following
the law, as presented by the Judge, that protects collectives
and cooperatives. After the trial, 4 of the 5 jurors who voted
to convict went to the District Attorney's office with advice:
Don't retry the case. You'll never get a conviction.
In
April 09 another collective, involving 40 pounds of medical cannabis
for Bay Area members of their collective (People v Lampach), had
their case dismissed by the prosecutor, after defendants turned
down two offers of plea bargains in favor of a jury trial. Where
no evidence of crime exists, but only legal collective cooperative
cultivation protected by statute, a Mendocino County jury will
not convict.
When
Senate Bill 420 became statutory law (11362.775), it adopted a
purpose: "to enhance access for patients and caregivers to
medical marijuana through collective cooperative cultivation projects",
which represented "a dramatic change in the law", in
the words of the Urziceanu 3rd District Appeals Court, as they
explained how legal protections in SB420 go beyond those in Prop
215, which is primarily a treatise on patients' rights to obtain,
use, possess, cultivate and transport marijuana for medical purposes.
It makes no mention of collectives or cooperatives.
The Appeals Court unanimously ruled that "collective cooperative
cultivation projects" gain additional legal protections to
"sell" and "distribute" cannabis for medical
purposes, if they are organized not for profit but rather for
collective cooperative good in compliance with H&S11362.775.
Financial transactions can occur through a reasonable salary,
payment for labor and "providing" of medicine and compensation
for expenses.
Increasingly,
as guidelines become clear, there is a growing patient preference
for legality within collectives and cooperatives, seeking safety,
transparency and accountability within closed-circuit membership
associations, not restricted to a single county or a certain number
of patients, as defined in the 2008 AG Guidelines.
The
patient majority, who are landless, low income, lacking in access
to medicine, depend on banding together in First Amendment protected
membership associations, sharing resources in the spirit of non-competition,
based on the integral needs of the whole rather than the profits
of a few. Working together collectively and cooperatively is the
way to "do it right".
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