Archive March, 2010

California Debt Crisis Opens the Door for Legal Marijuana – Californians to vote on legal marijuana rules

27 March, 18:13, by admin Tags: , , ,

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — It’s official: Californians will decide whether legal marijuana should be used to plug the state’s $20 billion budget gap.

OAKLAND, Calif.: A medical marijuana activist holds a sign during a rally on Jan. 4, 2010.

California residents are expected to vote this year on whether legalization should be approved to raise nearly $1.4 billion in state revenue. That’s based on an estimate from the State Board of Equalization, a tax administration agency.

“It would be another source of revenue for the state,” said Anita Gore, spokeswoman for the board. The board has not issued an opinion on legalization as a means of easing the state’s budget crisis, she added.

California Secretary Debra Brown confirmed on Wednesday that enough signatures had been collected to put AB 390, a marijuana legalization bill, on the ballot for Nov. 2. A press release from the secretary said that legalization proponents submitted 694,248 petition signatures for the bill, easily surpassing the required 433,791.

“The momentum for reform has grown exponentially since we introduced the bill last year,” said Quitin Mecke, spokesman for Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, the lead sponsor of the bill. “We’re excited about the prospect to reform drug laws again.”

Mecke noted that California was the first state to pass legislation allowing medicinal marijuana, 14 years ago.

Unlike prior legislation that has passed in California and other states, this form of legalization is not restricted to medicinal use of marijuana. The bill proposes that marijuana be regulated and taxed in a similar way to alcohol.

According to the bill, people would have to be 21 years or older “to possess, cultivate, or transport marijuana for personal use.” Californians would not be permitted to use the drug in public or within the presence of minors, and would not be allowed to possess it on school grounds.

Most importantly, as far as the budget gap is concerned, the bill stipulates that the drug would be subject to a sales tax. An additional retail fee of $50 would be imposed on every ounce that’s sold.

The State Board of Equalization estimates that the state could raise $1.382 billion in annual tax revenues from legal marijuana. The figure is based on estimated revenue of $990 million from the retail fees and $392 million from sales taxes.

“With the state in the midst of an historic economic crisis, the move towards regulating and taxing marijuana is simply common sense,” Ammiano said in a press release when he first proposed the bill last year.

Also, Mecke said that legalization could prompt the state to “reallocate” more than $300 million in law enforcement spending away from non-violent drug activity to address violent crimes.

Is America Ready? MSNBC Debate on Medical Marijuana Harvard Study vs Attorney for Drug Free America

25 March, 21:17, by admin

Mexico bristles as some U.S. states relax marijuana laws

25 March, 21:07, by admin Tags:

MEXICO CITY — As more U.S. states permit medical marijuana, and California considers legalizing cannabis sales to adults, Mexico is voicing irritation at the gap between drug laws north and south of the border and saying it undercuts the battle against Mexico’s violent drug cartels.

Mexico Secretary of the Interior Fernando Gomez Mont said last week the U.S. medical marijuana trend was “worrisome” and “complicates in a grave way” efforts to resolve Mexico’s soaring drug-related violence.

The issue came to the fore earlier this week when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton led a high-level U.S. delegation to Mexico to discuss counter-drug strategies.

Clinton said law enforcement authorities are keeping close tabs on medical marijuana dispensaries in the 14 states where such sales are permitted. She added that she doesn’t believe that the rising number of states that allow the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes was a major factor in marijuana flows into the U.S. from Mexico.

“We have not changed our laws, and we do not see this as a major contributor to the continuing flow of marijuana, the vast, vast majority of which is used for recreational purposes,” Clinton said.

More states are permitting medical marijuana use, and New York may become the 15th to do so. California, which pioneered medical marijuana use in 1996, is moving even faster, setting a November vote on whether to legalize personal marijuana possession and allow regulated sales of marijuana to those over age 21. If approved, the move would be the first of its kind in the U.S.

A Mexican historian and commentator, Lorenzo Meyer Cossio, said the government of President Felipe Calderon “feels offended” by the growing trend of U.S. states to allow medical marijuana, or perhaps go further as California may do. Mexican laws against marijuana and narcotics remain tough, the result of U.S. pressure dating back more than half a century, he said.

Meyer said the California initiative to legalize marijuana sales, if approved, would ripple to Mexico, underscoring the difference in legal treatment and giving impetus to decriminalization efforts.

“It is inevitable that if this occurs in California, a neighboring state that is so important to us, that there will be repercussions here,” Meyer said.
Calderon, the head of a center-right party, deployed 50,000 soldiers to the border days after coming to office in late 2006 to combat the cartels, which derive huge profits from marijuana as well as cocaine, heroin and methamphetamines.

More Mexicans than ever are dying as drug cartels battle for turf along the busiest border in the world. In Ciudad Juarez, Mexico’s most dangerous city, more than 530 people have been slain already this year, including three people connected to the U.S. consulate earlier this month.

Mexican marijuana production is soaring, according to a report issued Thursday by the Justice Department’s National Drug Intelligence Center.
Estimated Mexican marijuana production climbed to 21,500 metric tons in 2008 from 10,100 metric tons in 2005, the report said, adding that as the military has turned its attention from illicit crop eradication to combating violence from the cartels, marijuana eradication efforts have fallen by nearly half.

Even advocates of the decriminalization of marijuana in the U.S. said they empathize with Mexican leaders, who are deploying troops in a fierce battle with well-armed drug cartels at the urging of Washington.

“They are caught in the middle of realities of U.S. consumer demands and American political intransigence,” said Stephen Gutwillig, the California director of the Drug Policy Alliance, an advocacy group for alternatives to the drug war.
Gutwillig said he thinks the trend toward allowing medical marijuana in U.S. states, and even the outright decriminalization of marijuana, would eventually weaken the Mexican drug cartels.

“Any sort of authorized regulated market for marijuana in the United States cannot be good for the bottom line of criminal cartels,” Gutwillig said.

Medical marijuana users risk job loss (CNN)

25 March, 21:05, by admin Tags: ,

(CNN) — When a rare form of cancer invaded Joseph Casias’ nasal cavity and his brain, his doctor prescribed marijuana to help alleviate the daily pain.
Casias lives in Michigan, where medical marijuana is legal.
But his employer, Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest retailer, fired him in November 2009 after he failed a drug test.

Casias, 29, says he never came to work high. He’s got a medical marijuana card to prove he’s allowed to smoke legally in the state.

“I was angry they did this to me because I always tried my best,” said Casias, who was employed at Wal-Mart for five years. He earned an Associate of the Year award in 2008. “I want my job back. I thought I was part of the Wal-Mart family.”

To date, 14 states have laws allowing the use of medical marijuana, which shield legal users from criminalization but don’t protect them from them penalties enforced by their employers. As more people are being prescribed marijuana across the nation, they are wrestling with a caveat: They could be fired.
Health.com: Medicinal marijuana by state

Without laws defending medical marijuana users from employers’ drug policies, Casias and a growing number of medical marijuana users are being let go from their jobs, says Keith Stroup on the legal counsel team of the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. He said his office, headquartered in Washington, receives about 300 e-mails and phone calls a year from medical marijuana users who have been fired or had job offers rescinded because of a failed drug test.

“Usually they talk about how they have lost their job,” Stroup said. “And I tell them there’s not a thing they can do about it.”

There is no national estimate of how many medical marijuana users are at risk of being fired — or of not being hired — for using the drug as part of their treatment. Many employees, who have been fired for using doctor-prescribed pot, often remain quiet because they fear the stigma or threat losing their next job opportunity.

In California, the first state to legalize medical marijuana, 37,000 medical marijuana cards have been authorized since 2004. In Michigan, where Casias lives, the Department of Community Health reports about 10,800 people have medical marijuana cards.

Michigan is an at-will employment state, which means employers can terminate a worker for any reason except for being in a federally protected class such as race, gender and religion.

But medical marijuana users are not considered a protected group. If a company has zero-tolerance drug policies, then they can fire someone who uses medical marijuana, attorneys say. Labor law experts say most states operate this way, unless the employee has a specific employment contract that makes exceptions for medical marijuana use.

In 2008, the California Supreme Court backed up employers, ruling a private company could fire an Air Force veteran whose doctor prescribed him marijuana for his chronic and disabling back pain. The veteran was hired by a telecommunications company but fired several weeks after he tested positive for marijuana. The landmark case has many medical marijuana users fretting about their employment prospects, legal experts say.

But Michigan may be an exception to most states. Part of Michigan’s law, passed in 2008, does address employers, saying a patient carrying a medical marijuana card cannot be “denied any right or privilege” by a “business or occupational or professional licensing board.”

Some attorneys say Michigan’s law could be fertile grounds for a discrimination suit. Casias hasn’t decided whether he will pursue a lawsuit.

Some attorneys say Wal-Mart acted within legal bounds in Casias’ termination. Although some states have legalized medical marijuana, the federal government still bans the drug. Many employers like Wal-Mart argue they are following federal guidelines.

“It’s just an unfortunate situation all around,” said Greg Rossiter, a Wal-Mart spokesman. “We are sympathetic to Mr. Casias condition, but like other companies we have to consider overall safety of our customers and associates, including Mr. Cassias, when making a difficult decision like this.”
James Shore, a labor attorney in Washington who represents employers, says companies are afraid medical marijuana users may perform their job while impaired.

“The key thing for employers is to make sure they review their drug testing and human resources policies from top to bottom,” Shore said. “They need to make a companywide decision and be consistent about it.”
Dr. Lester Grinspoon, a professor emeritus at Harvard Medical School, explained the impairment issue: The high from marijuana usually disappears after a few hours. For patients, who medicate with marijuana frequently, they build a higher tolerance against impairment.

Casias said he never smoked right before his shifts. He had been using medical marijuana for about four months before he failed the drug test.

The debate on whether employers can fire medical marijuana users comes at a time when more states are expected to legalize medical marijuana. At least 16 states are considering the legalizing medical marijuana during this legislative session, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Even states once considered to be conservative on drug policies, such as Kansas and Alabama, are reconsidering.

The push toward legalizing medical marijuana is gaining clout.
Last fall, the American Medical Association asked the federal government to review the classification of marijuana and move the drug into a less restrictive category. The AMA has not taken a position on supporting states that have legalized medical marijuana. A state lawmaker in Colorado this week wants to draft a law that would allow veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder to access medical marijuana with a doctor’s permission.

Jonathan Hogue, 27, believes the workplace should allow for legalized medical marijuana use. The Portland, Oregon, resident suffers from arthritis and relies on marijuana to ease his back pain. A physician wrote a prescription for him, he says, but a few months ago a nursing job offer was rescinded because of his medical marijuana use. CNN contacted the private nursing company but did not get a response.

“It’s straight discrimination,” Hogue said. “I was trying to be completely honest with them about not trying to hide it because it’s not illegal.”
Supporters of medical marijuana also argue prescription drugs such as Oxycodone can be just as dangerous and widely abused.

“If you are a medical marijuana user, you’re treated like a drug addict or a second-class citizen,” said Douglas Hiatt, a labor attorney in Seattle, Washington, where medical marijuana is legal. He’s encountered dozens of medical marijuana patients who have lost jobs. “What other medicine out there causes this much trouble?”

Trouble is what Joseph Casias, a father who needs to support his family, is facing after Wal-Mart let him go. He’s already accrued $10,000 of debt from unpaid medical bills. Living on unemployment checks, he constantly worries whether his cancer will get worse since he can no longer afford treatment.
This month, a group of supporters have come to his side, holding rallies and forming a Facebook group “Let Joseph Casias Talk.” Casias is thankful for all the support, but ultimately, he said, he just wants his job back.

Washington state’s medical-marijuana law is too restrictive

25 March, 21:03, by admin Tags: ,

WASHINGTON’S medical-marijuana law was advertised as humane and tolerant in the 1990s, when this state legalized cannabis as medicine, along with California, Oregon, Alaska and Maine. Now most of the states in the West allow it — and Washington falls behind. Our law is unfairly restrictive.

In January, the Washington Supreme Court ruled in State v. Fry that our law offers medical users no protection from search, seizure and arrest. The court said the immunity is from penalty only. The medical-marijuana user, the court said, has still “committed a criminal act, but pleads an excuse for doing so.”

This needs to be changed. People with a doctor’s OK should be able to use marijuana without having their doors kicked in. They are patients, not criminals. This is the rule of tolerance Washington voters thought they were approving 12 years ago, and it has now become a civilized minimum.

Washington’s law allows patients to grow marijuana for themselves or for one other person.

In 2008, the Department of Health stated in a report that “home cultivation is not feasible for all patients.” That is clearly so. It is not reasonable to require every patient, or every other patient, to start and manage an indoor farm, but that is what the law effectively says.

It also forbids selling processed marijuana or live plants. The raid on cannabis entrepreneur Steve Sarich shows what happens when the law is so restrictive. Somebody just does it.

Sarich was apparently growing and selling small plants for $15 each. Police said he had 259 small plants started from cuttings, 80 medium plants and 36 large ones. The maximum allowed by the Department of Health is 15 plants.

The public question is not whether one man broke the rules, but what the rules should be.

Start with the idea in the Department of Health’s report that “there needs to be a safe, legal source for qualified patients.”

That means dispensaries — places where people with authorization can buy plants or processed marijuana, in lawful, above-board and taxed transactions. California allows dispensaries. Washington should, also.

Pot Wars: Battlefield California

25 March, 19:10, by admin

Marijuana Fact or Lies?

25 March, 17:19, by admin

Medical marijuana target for criminals (The Durango Herald)

25 March, 01:08, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

SAN FRANCISCO – Patients, growers and clinics in some of the 14 states that allow medical marijuana are falling victim to robberies, home invasions, shootings and even murders at the hands of pot thieves.

Push to legalize medical marijuana (FOX 11 Green Bay)

24 March, 22:01, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana
The push is on from supporters of medical marijuana to get the drug legalized this year. Click on the headline for Lou Hillman's report.

Could this be the year for medical marijuana in New York? (Press & Sun-Bulletin)

24 March, 21:48, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

ALBANY — The Senate is making a renewed push to legalize medical marijuana in New York, hoping to make it the 16th state to legalize the drug for patients with serious, debilitating or life-threatening illnesses.

Three arrested at two L.A. medical marijuana dispensaries (CBS 47 Fresno)

24 March, 21:03, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police say three people have been arrested following a raid on two medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles. Police announced Wednesday that Rinaldo Cruzado, Stas Dolinsky and Noah Kleinman were arrested on suspicion of illegally selling marijuana. Each is being held on $20,000 bail. Search warrants were served Tuesday at Medco Organics, The Relief Co. or TRC and four …

City takes step toward increased regulations for medical marijuana dispensaries (Solana Beach Sun)

24 March, 20:01, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

By JOE BRITTON City News Service The City Attorney’s Office was directed Wednesday to draft a proposed ordinance to strictly regulate where medical marijuana dispensaries are allowed to operate in San Diego. The proposed zoning law would prohibit medical marijuana dispensaries from locating in residential areas or within 1,000 feet of schools, playgrounds, libraries, churches, parks and places …

3 arrested at 2 LA medical marijuana dispensaries (The Washington DC Examiner)

24 March, 20:00, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

LOS ANGELES — Police say three people have been arrested following a raid on two medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles. Police announced Wednesday that Rinaldo Cruzado, Stas Dolinsky and Noah Kleinman were arrested on suspicion of illegally selling marijuana.

3 arrested at 2 LA medical marijuana dispensaries (San Diego Union-Tribune)

24 March, 19:58, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

Police say three people have been arrested following a raid on two medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles.

Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus (KTVM Butte)

24 March, 19:55, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

   Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus   Officials say federal law prohibits its possession or use and they worry breaking the law could jeopardize federal funding. 

Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus (KCFW Kalispell)

24 March, 19:39, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

   Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus   Officials say federal law prohibits its possession or use and they worry breaking the law could jeopardize federal funding. 

Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus (KECI Missoula)

24 March, 19:25, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

   Medical marijuana banned from U.M. Campus   Officials say federal law prohibits its possession or use and they worry breaking the law could jeopardize federal funding. 

Washington’s medical marijuana law needs fine-tuning (Seattle Times)

24 March, 18:24, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

The recent attacks on two homes of medical-marijuana patients who are also providers has highlighted some flaws in Washington’s current law. State Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, proposes some changes that will still permit patients to get the medical marijuana they need.

Medical Marijuana Bill Will Likely Allow Users To Grow Their Own (WUSA 9 Washington, D.C.)

24 March, 16:21, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

DC lawmakers are discussing adding a provision to a medical marijuana bill that would allow authorized users to grow the plants for their personal use.

Changes to Medical Marijuana Legislation Likely Next Week (DCist)

24 March, 15:41, by Yahoo! News Search Results for medical marijuana

Changes to legislation that would formalize the use of medical marijuana in the District will likely be introduced next week, according to D.C. Council member Phil Mendelson (D-At Large), who chairs the Committee on Public Safety and the Judiciary. Mendelson declined to give many details as to what changes will be made, but said discussions are being held on the number of dispensaries that would …