The BPG has been praised by successive Mayors of Berkeley Tom Bates[3] and Jesse Arreguín[4] and described as "embraced by local officials as a model business that donates to the poor and pays millions in taxes."[5] In the City of Berkeley, the October 31 has been declared the "Berkeley Patients Group Day."[6][7]
History
In 1996, voters in the State of California passed proposition 215, "allowing ill Californians to use cannabis for medical purposes with a doctor's recommendation. But Proposition 215 produced an immediate backlash with regard to implementation"[8] leading to a slow roll-out of a system effectively allowing patients to access cannabis, and years of legal uncertainty.
Initially, AIDSpatient Jim McClelland (known for coining the name Oaksterdam) had worked at the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club.[9] After its closure in October 1998,[10] McClelland joined forces with Debby Goldsberry[11] and Don Duncan[12] to open a similar cannabis dispensary in Berkeley.[13] On 31 October 1999, the group obtained a miscellaneous retail sales permit from authorities and opened on 5th Street in Berkeley,[14] a city where "officials were more responsive to activists and aware of the importance of medical marijuana provision to their constituents."[15]
McClelland died in 2001, and Duncan left BPG in 2004.[16] Debby Goldsberry continued to operate the BPG with Etienne Fontan and others.
Timeline of BPG's operators and location
Dates
Operators
Location
1999-2000
Jim McClelland, Debby Goldsberry, Don Duncan
5th Street
2000-2001
2747 San Pablo Ave.
2001-2004
Debby Goldsberry, Don Duncan
2004-2008
Debby Goldsberry, Etienne Fontan
2008-2010
Debby Goldsberry, Etienne Fontan, Tim Schick
2010-2012
Etienne Fontan, Tim Schick
2012-2012
No facility; Delivery
2012-2023
2366 San Pablo Ave.
The group aimed to "create a safe place where underserved patients can acquire high-quality medicine in a welcoming, community-centric environment",[14] but legislation at the time did not allow proper business operations or legal certainty for medical cannabis dispensation. On 4 November 2008, after years of advocacy for it by the three dispansaries operating at the time,[13][15] voters finally approved the citizen-initiative "Measure JJ" in the City of Berkeley which, among other provisions:
Permitted medical marijuana dispensaries "as a matter of right" under the zoning ordinance rather than through a use permit subject to a public hearing.[17]
During its decades of operations under a changing State and federal legislation, the BPG was subject to a number of raids and criminal prosecutions, some of which were publicized in the media. For instance, in 2007, during an episode of wave of letters to dispensaries' landlords,[19] the BPG has their assets seized.[20] In 2012, during a coordinated crackdown on California's dispensaries announced by district chief prosecutors, the BPG was forcefully evicted[21] on the grounds that it was located 984 feet away from the French school Ecole Bilingue de Berkeley, Proposition 215 establishing a minimum of 1000 feet.[3]
Federal prosecutions forced BPG into changes of location and of organizational practices. Initially based during a few months on 5th Street, the city forced BPG to move to 2747 San Pablo Avenue in 2000, in the commercial districts of the city. That location allowed on-site consumption, until the 2012 eviction. The BPG operated via delivery for some months, before reopening down the street at 2366 San Pablo Avenue, where BPG remained as of 2023.[22] Federal prosecution also attempted to evict BPG from its new location on similar grounds as in 2012, threats that only extinguished in 2014 when the Rohrabacher–Farr amendment was approved by Congress.[7]
Activities
Dispensation of cannabis
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Activism
Since its inception the group had to engage in advocacy to defend the legality of their activities.[13] Jim McClelland was an activist close to the Cannabis Action Network, and after his death, Duncan and Goldsberry "used the dispensary as a platform for activism, mobilizing patients, and working to insure a favorable political climate for dispensaries in Berkeley."[9]
The BPG has been known for providing cannabis free of charge for patients unable to pay.[23][24]
BPG members like Debby Goldsberry were also involved in organizing some of the first "420 events" on 20 April in Berkeley.[25] Duncan was involved in the creation of Americans for Safe Access.