• en_US
  • es_MX
  • About Us
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
No Result
View All Result

  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Publications
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Report News
SDNews.com
Home SDNews

City Attorney’s office sends warning letter to area smoke shops

Tech by Tech
April 2, 2008
in SDNews
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0 0
A A
0
0
SHARES
5
VIEWS

The movement to lead Pacific Beach toward creating a family-friendly atmosphere is not joking about smoking.
Community members in Pacific Beach want tobacco retail shops out of the community because they say the stores scare families away from an area that wants to attract more families.
Those against the smoke shops say the stores sell illegal drug paraphernalia in the form of glass pipes and glass water pipes, which they say, promotes illegal drug use.
Pacific Beach community groups sent letters in February to Councilman Kevin Faulconer, City Attorney Mike Aguirre and other city officials urging them to “make every effort to ensure that businesses selling illegal drug paraphernalia are pursued aggressively and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” according to the letter from Pacific Beach Community Planning Committee dated February 27. The Pacific Beach Town Council also sent letters to city officials.
Other communities with a lot of college students are also trying to stop availability of drug use.
College Area Community Council sent a letter in February to Council Member Jim Maddafer asking the city to revoke the business licenses of stores selling the paraphernalia.
Pacific Beach Community Planning Committee member, Marcie Beckett, said the smoke shops around here need to go if the community wants to improve Pacific Beach.
“[The stores] portray our community in a negative light and its not going to help us attract families to our community.” Beckett said.
The letter from the community planning committee states there are eight smoke shops in Pacific Beach within approximately one-square mile of seven elementary, middle and high schools. Beckett said a smoke shop called the High Road at 1465 Garnet Ave. sits across the street from the Mr. Frosty, 1466 Garnet Ave., where school age children buy ice cream. She said fancy displays in the windows of smoke shops could lead children to believe that using the pipes is okay.
Beckett said having more smoke shops than schools prevents some families from moving to Pacific Beach.
Laura Daly, president of the Pacific Beach Elementary Parent Teacher Organization agrees with Beckett.
“As a mother of three children in Pacific Beach, we don’t need [smoke shops], we don’t want [smoke shops].” Daly said.
To achieve their stated community plan goals of revitalizing the commercial district, the planning committee has turn to the law and community support to stop smoke shops from selling glass pipes and glass water pipes or bongs.
Discover Pacific Beach, the area business improvement district, has also sent a letter to all the smoke shops in the community recommending they follow the law, said Benjamin Nicholls, executive director of Discover PB. The shops, like every business in the district, pay an average of about $90 a year into Discover Pacific Beach coffers, Nicholls said.
Though California law prohibits the sale of drug paraphernalia the city has found it difficult to stop them from selling glassware.
In November, Aguirre ordered 52 smoke shops around the city to stop selling drug paraphernalia such as “oil burners” used to ingest methamphetamine and “baggies” used to package drugs. All but one store in the city complied, according to the city attorney’s office.
A manager at The Black in Ocean Beach said police came around in November to check if they sold illegal paraphernalia.
The Black sells many types of tobacco and the store manager maintains they don’t sell items for illegal purposes.
The city attorney’s office has not aggressively targeted stores selling glass pipes because pipes are supposed to be use to smoke tobacco, making them legal under state law, Makini Hammond, deputy city attorney with the Drug Abatement Response Team said.
She added that the city currently lacks the resources to go after the smoke shops under federal law, which would “get peoples’ attention,” she said
“We have primarily concentrated on meth and crack pipes. Those are the most serious. But I don’t know that there is the political will to go after the marijuana,” she said.
Regardless of the state of the city’s political will, Tim Adams, owner of the Da Glassworks, 1438 Garnet Ave., said the city doesn’t have a legal leg to stand on and reaffirms his right to sell the water pipes.
He said the possibility that some people use the pipes as bongs to smoke marijuana has no bearing on his right to sell them.
“Its like going to the store and buying a knife,” Adams said, “It’s not a murder weapon, until it’s used as a murder weapon,”
The community has a bigger problem with the local bar scene and binge drinking if community members seriously want to improve Pacific Beach, he said.

Previous Post

Hilton Foundation boosts Birch with big bucks

Next Post

OB tourist’s alleged assailants captured

Tech

Tech

Related Posts

City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops
Features

Bridle Trail a walk along the wild side of Highway 163

by Cynthia Robertson
April 11, 2023
City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops
Downtown News

Traffic safety campaign launches with posters at intersections where people died

by Juri Kim
April 7, 2023
Canned goods
Features

San Diego Food Bank food drive

by Drew Sitton
March 3, 2022
City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops
News

‘Different by design,’ Soledad House offers treatment programs for women

by Dave Schwab
February 4, 2022
sunset
La Jolla Village News

City supports closing beach parking lots overnight to deter crime

by Dave Schwab
May 22, 2023
Girl Scout zoom
News

Mayor Todd Gloria purchases first Girl Scout Cookies of 2022

by SDNEWS staff
May 22, 2023
City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops
News

Feeding San Diego surpasses 100 large-scale food distributions

by Thomas Melville
February 3, 2022
City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops
SDNews

Plenty of amazing meal options with takeout from these Downtown and Uptown restaurants.

by Tech
January 16, 2022
Next Post
City Attorney's office sends warning letter to area smoke shops

OB tourist's alleged assailants captured

[adinserter block="1"]
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Publications
  • Report News

CONNECT + SHARE

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • en_US
  • es_MX
  • Report News

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy