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'Joint Co-op' dedicated to medical marijuana in the open

by TONYA MOSLEY / KING 5 News

Bio | Email | Follow: @TonyaMosley

KING5.com

Posted on April 14, 2011 at 4:13 PM

Updated Thursday, Apr 14 at 4:29 PM

SEATTLE -- In Seattle's University District sits a blossoming business, the first in a new breed of medical marijuana dispensaries.

"We've actually only been here for two weeks," said Bonnie Fong of The Joint Cooperative.

It's part store, part medical office that includes growing, dispensing and even having a doctor on hand to give out authorization cards, all out in the open.

"We want to help and if we're hidden we can't help all that much," she said.

Fong believes "The Joint" is what more dispensaries will like if the medical marijuana bill goes through. The House and the Senate have both passed versions, it's now being looked over once again before being sent to Governor Gregoire.

"If we don't have any regulations or standards we can't provide the best service available," said Fong.

As it stands, those who are authorized to receive medicinal marijuana must also give a donation. Under the new law it would be considered a sale.

"If they make us pay taxes that makes us more legitimate and we would like to bring that to this community," she said. 

The Joint Cooperative is now a licensed as a non-profit. The bill in the legislature would require patients register with the state. Earlier this week protesters voiced their concerns outside of the ACLU offices.

"There's nothing, not one good thing for patients," said Steve Sarich of Cannacare.

"If we don't have any regulations or standards we can't provide the best service available," said Fong, who understands the fears but she believes clarity is needed.

Most cooperatives don't operate in the open and whether police shut them down varies from community to community.

Governor Gregoire has now asked the Justice Department for guidance on how to deal with state licensed marijuana dispensaries.

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Comments: Displaying 1 - 6 of 6

unhappy said on April 17, 2011 at 9:35 AM

WOW ... this case sounds like a drug dealer getting robbed....not someone who cares about suffering people providing a medical cure...... i never hear about doctors with drugs and cash lying around their house...... 5 charged after break-in at Kirkland-area pot grower's home The young men apparently knew there was plenty of marijuana and cash lying around Steve Sarich's Kirkland-area home because they'd either... Steve Sarich stands behind his bedroom door, shot out during the home invasion. The young men apparently knew there was plenty of marijuana and cash lying around Steve Sarich's Kirkland-area home because they'd either worked for the medical-marijuana advocate, attended seminars at his house or had previously broken in to steal pot, according to charges filed by King County prosecutors. I

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jdjdjdj said on April 14, 2011 at 7:39 PM

Earthrox- You make a very valid point and I'll stand behind it. I fully support your statement and agree that they need to legalize and tax it.

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Earthrox said on April 14, 2011 at 6:56 PM

As a legal mmj patient I have been to several of the MMJ Clubs about town. Although I fully support a patients right to access this vital medication, Treeclimbers’s comments are not too far off the mark. How does it serve the people the law was intended to help, to charge $10-15 per gram? These people already have stretched resources. Obtaining an adequate supply can be financially draining. Growing for most is untenable. How does it serve the community at large to have individual “Owners” profiting from the misery and illness of the most vulnerable? How does it serve the community when these dispensaries become magnets for armed robbery and burglary? I believe it should be legalized for all and appropriately taxed. A small portion set aside to fund MMJ purchases for the people the law was originally intended for. Those with terminal and chronic untreatable pain & disease.

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boobiewah said on April 14, 2011 at 5:34 PM

WHY should patients have to register with the state? Do any other patients at any drugstore or doctor's office for any ailment, register with the state? That is just plain communism, or nazi-ism. Legalize it and tax it, and enjoy the tax revenue and free up the justice system to promote real justice. You cannot imagine the improvements we'd see if they did all this because the justice system is crammed with BS prosecutions and detainment of people who should not be. Free up all those resources to focus on real crime while att he same time, add cash to the state's coffers. What a thought!

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jdjdjdj said on April 14, 2011 at 5:30 PM

Treeclimber, you are grossly misinformed and are, in turn, passing on misinformation to other propoganda believers such as yourself. For the record, most people you mention "dope" to will think you're talking about meth. Please enlighten me as to how going to a licensed doctor and telling him my back hurts and being prescribed marijuana is any different from going to a licensed doctor and telling him my back hurts and being prescribed narcotics? Really, wise up. I'm shocked so many people are against medical marijuana use and such supporters of prescription use. Do some homework and realize that Mary Jane isn't the bad guy you think it is. There are bigger fish to fry.... like the pharmeceutical companies who overmedicate people (including children) on a daily basis, leading most right down the path of serious addiction problems.

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treeclimber said on April 14, 2011 at 4:38 PM

Joint cooperative is nothing more than unlicensed drug dealers ,,.. they have a doctor on hand so you walk up give him some money tell him you got back pain and then he gives you a note to buy dope then you go over to fong and she sells you some dope.

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