Frank Donato, the city's chief financial officer, outlines the proposed 2018 municipal budget during a presentation to Council.
By Donald Wittkowski
Two marijuana advocates urged City Council on Thursday night to consider allowing a cannabis dispensary in Ocean City, but immediately faced strong opposition from members of the governing body.
“I’ll die before I’ll vote for recreational marijuana in Ocean City,” Councilman Michael DeVlieger said.
DeVlieger noted he does not oppose medical marijuana patients using the drug in the privacy of their own homes, but made it clear he is against having a pot dispensary in town.
“It’s a very slippery slope, and I don’t want it here,” he said. “And that goes for dispensaries as well.”
Agreeing with DeVlieger, Councilman Bob Barr insisted there was “no way” he would support the recreational use of marijuana or a dispensary in Ocean City.
“I don’t want a dispensary here or anything like that,” Barr said.
Barr expressed fear that marijuana users would simply begin smoking pot in popular tourist areas of town, such as the boardwalk and beaches, if the city did not block dispensaries from opening up.
DeVlieger and Barr’s opposition came in response to public comments from two medical marijuana advocates who argued that Ocean City should consider allowing a pot dispensary so that chronically ill patients and recreational customers would have easy access to cannabis while visiting or vacationing in the beach town.
“You don’t realize that you have the power of life and death in your hands,” said Edward “Lefty” Grimes, an activist who wants medical marijuana patients to have the right to smoke pot in public.
Grimes, who lives in East Hanover, N.J., said he drove two hours to Ocean City to attend the City Council meeting and to “beg you for our lives.”
Union representative Hugh Giordano argues that a marijuana dispensary could be a source of jobs and tax revenue for Ocean City.
Hugh Giordano, a representative of Local 152 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, told Council that a marijuana dispensary could serve Ocean City’s tourist market and also generate tax revenue.
“This is tax revenue that could go back to the town and create good jobs,” he said.
The UFCW, which represents union employees at the Acme supermarkets in Ocean City, also has medical marijuana workers in New Jersey as union members.
“It’s something we think is important to the union,” Giordano said.
Medical marijuana is legal in New Jersey, but Grimes accused former Gov. Chris Christie of creating “many roadblocks” that prevented patients from obtaining the drug for chronic pain or illness.
Noting that only a few medical marijuana dispensaries currently exist in the state, Grimes hopes that a new one will open up in Ocean City or perhaps another community at the Jersey Shore.
Frank Donato, the city's chief financial officer, outlines the proposed 2018 municipal budget during a presentation to Council.
Council will scrutinize the budget as it prepares to formally introduce it on March 22 during the first of two votes required for the spending plan. A final vote and public hearing are tentatively scheduled for April 26.
Council members reacted favorably after hearing Donato’s presentation. They called it a “lean budget” that places tight controls on spending, but promised to return with detailed questions for Donato.