Tag Medical Marijuana

VA to allow veterans to use medical marijuana at clinics in the 14 states where it’s legal

WASHINGTON – Patients treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics will be able to use medical marijuana in the 14 states where it’s legal, according to new federal guidelines.

The directive from the Veterans Affairs Department in the coming week is intended to clarify current policy that says veterans can be denied pain medication if they use illegal drugs. Veterans groups have complained for years that this could bar veterans from VA benefits if they were caught using medical marijuana.

The new guidance does not authorize VA doctors to begin prescribing medical marijuana, which is considered an illegal drug under federal law. But it will now make clear that in the 14 states where state and federal law are in conflict, VA clinics generally will allow the use of medical marijuana for veterans already taking it under other clinicians.

“For years, there have been veterans coming back from the Iraq war who needed medical marijuana and had to decide whether they were willing to cut down on their VA medications,” John Targowski, a legal adviser to the group Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access, which worked with the VA on the issue.

Targowski in an interview Saturday said that confusion over the government’s policy might have led some veterans to distrust their doctors or avoid the VA system.

Dr. Robert A. Petzel, the VA’s undersecretary for health, sent a letter to Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access this month that spells out the department’s policy. The guidelines will be distributed to the VA’s 900 care facilities around the country in the next week.

Petzel makes clear that a VA doctor could reserve the right to modify a veteran’s treatment plan if there were risks of a bad interaction with other drugs.

“If a veteran obtains and uses medical marijuana in a manner consistent with state law, testing positive for marijuana would not preclude the veteran from receiving opioids for pain management” in a VA facility, Petzel wrote. “The discretion to prescribe, or not prescribe, opioids in conjunction with medical marijuana, should be determined on clinical grounds.”

Opioids are narcotic painkillers, and include morphine, oxycodone and methadone.

Under the previous policy, local VA clinics in some of the 14 states, such as Michigan, had opted to allow the use of medical marijuana because there no rule explicitly prohibiting them from doing so.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, there are 14 states and the District of Columbia with medical marijuana laws. They are: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. New Jersey also recently passed a medical marijuana law, which is scheduled to be implemented next January.

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Montana health officials say loophole allows out-of-state residents to get medical marijuana

18 August, 19:35, by admin Tags: , ,

HELENA, Mont. – A person doesn’t have to live in Montana to receive a medical marijuana card from the state, health officials said Friday.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services discovered what it calls a loophole in state law after reviewing plans to require medical marijuana applicants to have a Montana driver’s license or state-issued identification, said department spokesman Chuck Council.

The new driver’s license policy was to begin on Monday, but the legal review has halted those plans.

“The law is mute on the subject of legal residency and there is no recourse for the Department of Public Health and Human Services but to keep the situation as it stands,” Council said. “On Monday, we will be moving forward, status quo, on the processing of out-of-state applications.”

The state health department maintains the medical marijuana patient registry, which stood at about 23,500 patients at the end of July. That’s an increase of nearly 4,000 people in just a month, a continuation of the medical pot boom that in the first six months of 2010 has seen more than 12,300 registered users added to the state registry.

Health officials decided to tighten the residency requirements after discovering several people whose permanent residences were outside Montana, such as college students and snowbirds, had applied for medical marijuana cards. It is unclear just how many such applications were received.

But unless the Legislature fixes the state law, health officials have no choice but to accept out-of-state applications, Council said.

State lawmakers are back in session in January, and an interim legislative committee is drafting changes meant to strengthen the law. The current law was passed by voter initiative in 2004, but the registration boom over the past year has exposed gray areas that police and municipal officials say have made oversight and enforcement difficult.

The founder of the Montana Caregivers Network, an advocacy group that has helped sign up thousands of medical marijuana patients, said Friday that the health department’s announcement is good news for patients.

“This was a clear violation,” Jason Christ said of the plan to require driver’s licenses. “I feel like they probably had a lot of calls by people about that.”

He has said that any qualifying patient should be able to get a medical marijuana
card from Montana, and that he is skeptical the Legislature will act to restrict that access to Montana residents.

“A lot of people have anticipated that the Legislature’s going to do a lot of things. They never have,” Christ said. “Intentions are great, but you can’t take intentions to the bank.”

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Toronto marijuana clinic raided

08 August, 21:43, by admin Tags: , ,

A downtown Toronto clinic that provided medical marijuana remained closed Thursday after the second police raid in four months.

Neev Tapiero, owner of the CALM Compassion Club at 106 Queen St. E., was arrested later at his home Wednesday, Const. Tony Vella said.

Officers from 51 Division investigated a “community complaint,” and seized an allegedly larger-than-permitted stock of pot, plus hashish and hash oil, he said.

Several people in the storefront near Jarvis St. were detained briefly, Vella said.

Nine people, including Tapiero, were arrested there on drug charges in late March.

A supportive website quoted lawyer Ron Marzel condemning the raid and Health Canada’s “dysfunctional medical marijuana program.”

The Toronto Hash Mob vowed to support Tapiero, 38, who founded Cannabis As a Living Medicine (CALM), and ran as a Marijuana Party candidate in the 2000 federal election in Toronto-Rosedale.

He faces 12 drug-related charges, including possession for trafficking purposes plus possessing crime proceeds.

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Marijuana legalization receiving fewer contributions than previous drug-related propositions – California

08 August, 21:41, by admin Tags: , , ,

Many big-money donors, such as George Soros, played a major role in the state’s pathbreaking 1996 medical marijuana initiative. But this year, Proposition 19 has attracted few large donations.

Two years ago, when Californians were voting on an initiative that would have trimmed prison time for nonviolent drug offenders, Bob Wilson, a wealthy New York City investor, spent $2.8 million on the ultimately unsuccessful campaign to get it passed.

Wilson would seem a likely sugar daddy for Proposition 19, the marijuana legalization initiative on the November ballot. He has been giving away much of his fortune, more than $500 million so far, and he believes that pot, which he tried but didn’t much like, ought to be legal.

“There’s no intellectual argument whatever for not legalizing it,” Wilson said. “People who get stoned do much less damage to themselves and others than people who get drunk.”


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Wilson has kept an eye on the initiative, but he doesn’t plan to send a check. The polls, he said, don’t look good. He thinksRichard Lee, the sponsor, should have waited until 2012. And, after Proposition 5 was trounced in 2008, he no longer trusts the state’s voters to be progressive trendsetters.

“I’m going to let Californians stew in their own juice,” he said.

Wilson is not alone in holding back. Despite the measure’s potential to inspire copycat initiatives, it has attracted few big-money supporters. This contrasts sharply with previous drug-related initiatives, which began the election year with major contributions. Notably missing is George Soros, the hedge-fund multibillionaire who has invested about $3 million to liberalize California’s drug laws.

“I think they are just waiting,” said Lee, who acknowledged that the poll numbers may have made them wary. “I’ve got to do a better job of showing them this is different.”

Lee remains by far the campaign’s biggest donor. He gave $1.5 million of the $1.9 million raised through June, according to the most recent finance reports. Lee, who has joked that he’s no longer a millionaire, donated $45,000 in the three months ending in June. Fundraising from other sources is picking up, but not at the pace Lee needs to reach the $10 million needed for a significant television campaign.

Lee and his allies remain hopeful that six-figure checks will roll in, but they also have plans to run a less expensive grassroots campaign. They believe they can win by persuading the narrow slice of undecided voters, primarily mothers with school-aged children, and turning out pro-legalization young voters. Lee also notes the initiative is getting extensive free nationwide media coverage.

But when Proposition 215, the pathbreaking medical marijuana initiative, was on the ballot in 1996, wealthy supporters, mostly from out of state, gave early and often. Midway through the election year, Soros; Peter Lewis, head of an Ohio-based insurance company; John Sperling, founder of the University of Phoenix; and George Zimmer, founder and chief executive officer of Men’s Wearhouse, had already donated and loaned a total of almost $1 million.

Four years later, Soros, Lewis and Sperling split a $1 million contribution to kick off Proposition 36, which replaced prison time with drug treatment for some nonviolent crimes.

The campaign for Proposition 5, a drug-sentencing reform measure, had raised $3.4 million by June 2008 from Soros; Sperling; Wilson; Jacob Goldfield, a New York investor; and Irwin Mark Jacobs, a founder of Qualcomm, the San Diego-based telecommuncations giant.

Only Zimmer has donated to Proposition 19. A spokesman said he would not discuss his $20,500 contribution. Soros, Lewis and Sperling could not be reached. Goldfield declined to comment.

Jacobs, who said he has never used illegal drugs, said he has been too busy to look at Proposition 19 but believes marijuana should be decriminalized. “I have certainly not opted out,” he said. “We’ve taken one approach for years and years, and it just hasn’t worked.”

The initiative’s opponents are not yet a financial threat, but “no” campaigns typically start slowly. By June, the campaign had raised $41,100 from five donors. “We just started,” said Andrew Acosta, a spokesman, “so I would assume that the more groups we talk to, things are going to start looking up for us.”

Opposition campaigns have attracted few big donors — except Proposition 5, which drew $1 million from the prison guards’ union and $250,000 each from A. Jerrold Perenchio, the former head ofUnivision, and Meg Whitman, the former Ebay executive who is now bankrolling a multimillion-dollar race for governor.

Soros and most other major donors to the California initiatives are supporters of the Drug Policy Alliance, a prominent advocacy group and a force behind the previous measures. Like the other pro-legalization groups, the alliance wanted to aim an initiative for 2012, when the presidential election would draw more liberal voters. That would also have given its donors four years to recover from a dispiriting loss.

“They didn’t give money in 2008 with the understanding that they would be funding another statewide campaign two years later,” said Stephen Gutwillig, the alliance’s California director.

Lee, however, brushed aside the pressure to wait. Doug Linney, Lee’s top political consultant, acknowledged these donors were not involved in the key decisions.

“Richard felt like the time was right and wanted to go out with this, and so we put it together a different way,” he said.

Wilson said that he admired Lee’s passion, but that he was on his own.

“I think the people who got this going this year ahead of when the drug people wanted to do it, it’s their ball and they’ve got to run it,” he said.

Linney and Lee think the deep-pocket donors, faced with a historic initiative, will not watch from the sidelines. “We’ve got one of the more juicier kind of things in town these days,” Linney said.

Ethan Nadelmann, the founder and the executive director of the decade-old Drug Policy Alliance, has cultivated Soros and other donors for years and is the main conduit to them. His role could be decisive.

“A victory for Prop. 19 would be a major breakthrough,” Nadelmann said, “so I am doing everything I can to help it, including trying to raise significant funds, but it’s difficult when the polling is 50-50.”

The biggest donor to Proposition 19 besides Lee is Philip D. Harvey, another Drug Policy Alliance backer. Harvey, who started one of the largest retailers of sex toys and pornography, gave $100,000 to the alliance’s committee, which will run an independent campaign for the initiative.

“The war on drugs is one of the most destructive, foolish and wasteful government efforts that we have ever come up with,” said Harvey, who now runs a foundation that promotes birth control in impoverished countries. “We put hundreds of thousands of perfectly peaceful people behind bars. I think it’s obscene.”

Harvey, who said he was almost sorry to say he didn’t get much out of smoking marijuana, said he was thrilled to see a legalization initiative on the ballot and was not dissuaded by the polls.

“It’s going to be close,” he said. “I understand that.”

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Oakland votes to permit large pot farms

28 July, 18:01, by admin Tags: ,
Oakland votes to permit large pot farms

By EVELYN NIEVES (AP) – Jul 21, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO — The Oakland City Council has approved a plan to license four production plants where marijuana would be grown, packaged and processed, moving Oakland closer to becoming the first city in the nation to authorize wholesale pot cultivation.

The council voted 5-2 with one abstention late Tuesday in favor of the plan. The measure will go before the council one more time for a final vote, but the outcome is not expected to change.

The vote came after more than two hours of public comment, with speakers seemingly evenly divided between those who opposed the measure — largely on the grounds that it would put small medical marijuana growers out of business — and those who said it would generate millions of dollars for Oakland in taxes and sales and create hundreds of jobs.

The plants would not be limited in size — one potential applicant for a license wants to open a plant that would produce over 21,000 pounds of pot a year — but they would be heavily taxed and regulated.

Those vying for one of the four licenses would have to pay $211,000 in annual permit fees, carry $2 million worth of liability insurance and be prepared to devote up to 8 percent of gross sales to taxes.

Proponents of the measure also touted the possibility of Oakland becoming the nation’s cannabis capital, especially if California voters approve the legalization of recreational marijuana in November.

“Do you want to be the “Silicon Valley of Cannabis?” said Jeff Wilcox, a local businessman who wants to build “AgraMed,” a 7.4-acre plant with a bakery, a lab and 100,000 square feet of cultivation space.

But Stephen DeAngelo, executive director of Harborside Health Center, the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the world, said small growers were coming to him terrified that the ordinance would mean the end of their livelihoods.

One of the co-sponsors of the ordinance, Rebecca Kaplan, said the ordinance would not take effect until January, giving the council time to come up with a plan for medium-sized growers.

Councilwoman Nancy Nadel said she worried about quality of the product, wanted environmental protections and questioned why the council was voting on the measure now if it wasn’t going to take effect until January.

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Montel Williams Lobbies Albany To Legalize Med Marijuana

29 June, 23:22, by admin Tags: ,

Montel Williams, the former talk show host who now suffers from multiple sclerosis, is making the rounds here at the State Capitol today in hopes of encouraging the legalization of medical marijuana in New York.

Williams, who uses marijuana to ease the effects of his condition, noted 14 states and the District of Columbia have passed MM laws, and many other state legislatures are now considering it.

It’s questionable whether the New York measure will make it through, and officials including Mayor Bloomberg have issued strenuous objections to its passage.

I had a chance to chat briefly with Williams, who says he’s not giving up hope.

Watch:

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Weed Control Part 1: MS sufferer finds relief with medical marijuana

29 June, 23:20, by admin Tags: ,

Matt Young used to bust kids for smoking pot as a security officer in Calgary, but now it’s Young who’s trying to find a way to smoke marijuana in peace.

That search almost cost him his life.

Young, now living in Saskatchewan, is a former private security manager and amateur bodybuilder who wanted to be a police officer. He’s watched all that disappear as his multiple sclerosis advanced since his diagnosis at age 14.

The 28-year-old has tried every drug suggested to him by doctors in three provinces, but he said marijuana, which he only tried once or twice in high school, is the only drug that stops his spasms and lets him eat and sleep at night.

“Marijuana still doesn’t eliminate the problems, but it reduces them so I can get out of bed and play with my boy,” Young said, referring to his seven-year-old stepson.

At the end of May, Health Canada sent Young the card that allows him to legally smoke marijuana. He’s one of 100 Saskatchewan residents and 4,029 Canadians who can legally possess cannabis, according to Health Canada.

“I wish it could have been something else that helped me,” Young said, sitting beside his childhood friend and now partner, Tina Mauro, in their home north of Saskatoon. “But I’ve tried everything else.”

To legally smoke pot, one has to find a doctor willing to sign a prescription for the drug. Health Canada approves the possession licence and the prescription is filled by growing a small supply of marijuana, finding a designated holder (also licensed by the government) or buying from Health Canada.

Legal access to medical marijuana in Saskatchewan is not easily obtained, say several users and proponents of medicinal pot.

Earlier this year, the local chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws blasted the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan for deterring doctors from prescribing pot. Health Canada counts 59 Saskatchewan doctors who support medical marijuana.

Young had a difficult time finding a Saskatchewan doctor to prescribe marijuana before Health Canada sent him his licence.

“A lot of damage has been done to our lives,” Young said. “If somebody reads this, maybe it’ll provide them a glimmer of hope.”

- – -

Young grew up in Saskatchewan, but found himself in Calgary where he ran security for an office complex.

He applied to be an officer with the Calgary Police Service, but was told he was ineligible because of his multiple sclerosis, a disease that attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.

Eventually, the MS symptoms escalated and Young sought treatment. He tried a barrage of drugs prescribed by doctors. The medication didn’t work and, in 2005, after getting approval from Health Canada, he tried marijuana as an alternative.

“I got better,” Young said, while sitting in his two-bedroom bungalow in a small town north of Saskatoon.

He smoked for a year. He felt so good that he stopped smoking. He had a severe relapse and he soon found himself moving back to Saskatchewan in 2008 to live with Mauro at her suggestion. They were engaged in September 2009.

But in Saskatchewan, Young couldn’t find a doctor to prescribe marijuana. They pushed more pharmaceuticals on him, he said, but nothing worked and the drugs often made Young more ill.

“He’s the one in 100 that the drugs didn’t work for,” said Mauro, a former pharmacy technician who now works at a bank.

Young pleaded with his doctors to write him a prescription for marijuana. He’s not a man to mingle with drug dealers and Health Canada sells pot at half the price of its street value.

In January, frustrated and depressed with refusals from doctors, Young set out to kill himself. He overdosed on prescription pills at his home while his family was away.

“When I walked in the door, he stopped breathing,” Mauro said. Their son was screaming for Young to wake up while Mauro called paramedics. Young was taken to Shellbrook Hospital before a transfer to Saskatoon where he spent several days in a coma.

“The doctors didn’t think he was going to make it,” Mauro said. “He was in a coma on a Monday and on Tuesday I walked into the hospital room and he turned over and looked at me and we both started crying.”

- – -

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan warns doctors about prescribing medical marijuana. The treatment has plenty of anecdotal evidence but little else to back up health claims, say medical experts.

“In time, I think we’ll have a greater level of consensus, but we need more evidence,” said Dr. Peter Butt, a Saskatoon family physician and addictions specialist. “We’re in the early of days of medical marijuana and the story has yet to unfold.

“There’s limited evidence about its efficacy. We have a product being smoked, so there’s a health problem with that. Just as tobacco companies are being sued, some physicians might be reluctant to prescribe something that will also cause harm.”

There are other problems: Criminal involvement in marijuana trade and the contamination of street drugs, addiction and the trouble of measuring dosage for different patients.

But there are cases in which marijuana has helped people, especially those who are HIV positive, receiving chemotherapy or diagnosed with MS, said Butt, also an assistant professor with the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine.

There is some evidence that marijuana can help patients regain their appetite and ease nausea and chronic pain, he said.

“It can help in select cases, but that doesn’t mean it’s a panacea for all chronic pain,” Butt said.

To make marijuana use safer for patients, researchers must develop a better delivery system to avoid the health problems associated with smoking, Butt said.

“How many medications are dispensed in leaf form?” Butt said.

Some medical marijuana proponents and users believe current alternatives — sprays and pills with concentrated THC — don’t work as well as smoking.

The MS Society doesn’t recommend MS patients use marijuana, but does say that there is anecdotal evidence to support its benefits, said Laurie Murphy, the charity’s client services co-ordinator in Saskatoon.

“It can help with spasticity and pain,” she said. “But we can’t advocate for any treatment that doesn’t have the research to back it up.”

The society directs curious patients to Health Canada if they feel like marijuana is the last resort, Murphy said.

“I don’t know of many doctors in Saskatchewan who support it and many won’t even talk about it,” she said. “It’s sad they can’t access (marijuana) if they benefit from it.”

- – -

A neurologist gave Young a prescription in February and Health Canada mailed Young his licence four months later.

Young can only pay for some of his prescription, which allows him 3.5 grams of marijuana per day. Health Canada charges Young about $600 per month to fill his prescription, half of the street value for the same amount, he said.

He’d like governments to subsidize marijuana, like provinces do for other prescriptions, for low-income people. He and Mauro are a single-income family and they run a cake decorating business on the side. The couple is trying to keep their home as they fight financial problems, Young said.

Despite the discount, Young only bought one ounce for his first purchase this year. He smoked it all by the middle of June and he can’t order more until the end of the month.

“He scrapes and conserves if there’s any residue left,” Mauro said.

Young said marijuana “is supposed to heal, but waiting for it feels like torture.”

In an email, a Health Canada spokesperson suggested licensed users grow their marijuana — it charges $20 for a packet of 30 seeds — to keep expenses low.

Young doesn’t want to grow his marijuana, although it’d be easy to do with Health Canada’s approval. He lives with a young family in a small town and fears how even a couple of marijuana plants could jeopardize his family’s security.

“I hope to fall asleep before the spasms start,” he said. Without the marijuana, Young said, his body is wracked by insomnia, spasms, nausea and eating troubles. “I feel like I’m literally losing my mind. I have a digital recorder I rely on because I’m constantly forgetting things.”

Once Young inhales the marijuana smoke, the changes are instant, Mauro said.

“The depression is gone. His thoughts are clear, concise,” she said. “He loves to write again and the appetite is there.”

“The only thing that makes it better is the marijuana,” Young said.

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Weed Control Part 2: ‘Still treated as criminals’ Medical marijuana growers face obstacles, while police still see issues

29 June, 23:18, by admin Tags: ,

The walls are bright white and patched with red construction tape. Fluorescent lights — mimicking sunlight — shine down on 20 flowering plants of varying strains.

Two giant pails of water being aerated fill the room with a low hum, as Jason Hiltz stands above rows of flowering herbs in the converted garage greenhouse.

There, just off the main drag in a small town outside Saskatoon, sits one of 94 legal medical marijuana grow operations in the province and one of the many Hiltz helped get off the ground.

It’s unsophisticated, but it works, he said.

“This has a few glossy spots,” Hiltz tells James Francis, 52, who says he’s the longest licensed user of medical marijuana in Canada.

“When did you last water?”

Hiltz, a horticulturist and Saskatchewan’s best known pot advocate, is Francis’ cannabis consultant, helping him and 12 other local medical marijuana growers cultivate their crops.

Hiltz, who is also a licensed user after a car crash left him with chronic pain, helps everyone from family friends to elderly people on their death beds access medicinal marijuana and advises a number of growers on how to wind through Health Canada’s bureaucratic morass.

“It’s about compassion,” Hiltz says. “Honestly, it’s probably easier being an illegal grower than a legal grower.”

More research is supporting previous anecdotal evidence that cannabis may have a wide range of therapeutic uses, such as the treatment of Alzheimer’s, depression, glaucoma, epilepsy, cancer, HIV/AIDS and hepatitis.

However, the medical growers in the Saskatoon area say the government’s program has artificially depressed the medical market by making it difficult for patients to qualify, supplying what many consider poor-quality marijuana and restricting qualified licensed growers to supplying a maximum of two patients.

Growers say they live in fear of break-ins, some say they’re discriminated against by police who still view their grow-ops with an air of suspicion and struggle against the insurance industry, which wants absolutely nothing to do with the risks.

“We’re still treated as criminals,” says Jeff Lundstrom, the owner of Skunk Funk, a head shop that he says has become the local headquarters for the medical marijuana community.

Lundstrom, who is authorized to grow for two users under the federal program, had his garage-based grow room broken into over winter. Someone caught wind of the operation, drove a vehicle through his garage and made off with two plants he was pollenizing. The legal operation wasn’t covered by insurance and he was forced to pay for the repairs — the thieves were never caught.

“Now, you don’t worry about the police kicking in your door,” Lundstrom says, “you worry about some thug kicking in your door and stealing the medicine.”

Saskatoon Police Const. Dean Hoover, head of the integrated drug unit, says Saskatoon hasn’t yet seen the problem, cited by the RCMP in several jurisdictions, where medical growers traffic excess marijuana to make a profit.

The major issue for police is the lack of available information from the Health Canada program. The police aren’t given a list ahead of time on where medical grow-ops exist. They’re not informed until they want to do a search warrant, he said. If police agencies knew the addresses they may also be able to help with enforcement, he says. Grey is not a good colour for the law, he says.

“Until they get some type of system where they give us lists of who’s got them to ensure they’re not going above their quotas, what are we going to do?” Hoover says.

A Health Canada spokesperson, in an email interview, says the government will only disclose information to police if a person is suspected of illegal activity. Otherwise, it’s seen as a privacy breach.

The legalization of marijuana or even the over-the-counter sale in a compassion club in Saskatchewan, where weed is given out to those with a medical card, is a pipe dream because the acceptance of the drug, from a cultural perspective, doesn’t come close to matching that of British Columbia, where several dispensaries exist, Hoover says.

Marijuana is the most prolific drug in Saskatoon and its risks shouldn’t be downplayed due to the potency of modern pot, he says. With the advent of THC pills, there’s no need for smoking medical marijuana, he says.

“I’ve never talked to a cocaine user or morphine addict that didn’t start off by smoking marijuana,” Hoover says. “Anyone that says it’s not a gateway drug is full of shit.”

Lundstrom sits behind a desk at the back of his store, hemp posters adorning the walls and pot paraphernalia strewn around his desk.

He has tried to get a medical exemption himself because of chronic back problems suffered when he fell off scaffolding, but has been denied four times by wary doctors. He left the doctor’s office in tears recently after he was told cannabis stimulates appetite, a side-effect that would not help with his weight. Like the vast majority of patients who say they need marijuana as a medicine, Lundstrom continues to buy pot on the black market.

The market exists in Saskatchewan to start a compassion club or dispensary similar to those in B.C., but those looking to grow or use for medical reasons are stilted by doctors unwilling to prescribe, Lundstrom says.

Several advocates say their goal is to start a sustainable commercial agriculture operation in Saskatchewan to provide medicinal marijuana to those with exemption cards if the Health Canada restrictions are lifted.

“There’s 50 people I could be growing for right now and I’m only allowed to grow for two. It’s a headache, plain and simple,” Lundstrom says.

“It’s still illegal and to many people medical marijuana is just simply a loophole to an illegal system and that’s how it’s being treated.”

The limit of growing for two users, however, doesn’t appear set to change any time soon. It was established “in order to reduce the risk of diversion and to protect the health and safety of Canadians,” Health Canada’s spokesperson writes.

Francis, the long-time medical marijuana user whose name has been changed because of fear of break-ins and the stigma he faces in the small town, says he’s been working out daily, awaiting the day a burglar comes through the door.

He decided to build his own grow-up — at a substantial cost — because product from Health Canada wasn’t potent enough and the supply from growers in B.C. was inconsistent.

A collision in Saskatoon 12 years ago crushed half of Francis’ spinal chord, leaving him unable to feel his legs for three years. A long-time recreational user, he turned to cannabis, which he smokes or ingests up to 10 times a day, because heavier prescription pain killers zapped his energy, left him constipated and unable to sleep.

Slowly, Francis has been able to wean the amount of morphine he uses down to almost zero, which he credits to medicinal marijuana.

“It doesn’t kill the pain, but it deflects it,” he says. “It helps your mind carry on.”

- – -

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BY PROVINCE

Province People Supportive authorized physicians to possess

Alberta 282 140
B.C. 1,008 536
Manitoba 57 30
New Brunswick 88 44
Nfld and Lab. 39 24
Nova Scotia 491 159
Ontario 1,631 801
Québec 305 162
Saskatchewan 100 59
Rest of Canada 28 22

TOTAL 4029 1977

Source: Statistics Canada – 2009
- – -
FEDERAL REGULATIONS

Possession, sale and production of marijuana in Canada remains illegal. However, Health Canada provides an exemption for compassionate care and for treating symptoms associated with several conditions, including severe pain or persistent muscle spasms from multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury or spinal cord disease; severe pain, nausea or anorexia from cancer or HIV/AIDS infections; and severe pain from forms of arthritis or seizures from epilepsy.

Health Canada also exempts those who have debilitating symptoms of other medical conditions that do not respond to conventional treatments. Those who qualify require a doctor to verify the medical problem and prescribe the usage. The users are also required to obtain a licence from Health Canada.

The government suggests three sources for medicinal marijuana: Buy the weed grown for Health Canada from Prairie Plant Systems of Saskatoon, grow your own or designate someone else to grow it for you. Those who grow marijuana must be licensed by Health Canada and meet security requirements to prevent loss or theft. The government also regulates the amount of marijuana that can be grown and stored.

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Saskatchewan Licensed pot grower sees opportunities beyond medical marijuana

29 June, 23:15, by admin Tags: , ,

SASKATOON – A reputation of any kind, even for a business, is hard to shake.

And when your company is the only federally licensed medical marijuana producer in Canada, that’s the first thing people think of when they hear the company’s name, says Brent Zettl, the company’s president and CEO.

But providing cannabis to patients authorized by Health Canada isn’t the Saskatoon-based company’s only focus, even if sales of the CanniMed herbal treatment account for between 60 and 65 per cent of its revenue, Zettl says.

“It’s kind of like our gateway drug, if I can use that term,” he says in an interview. “It’s our gateway drug to these other compounds that we’re planning to have produced in plants.”

For nearly 10 years, PPS has been producing medical marijuana on a contract basis for the federal government. Originally grown in the deep depths of a decommissioned mine in Flin Flon, Man. – known unofficially as the Ganja Mine – PPS moved its legal hydroponic pot operation out of the town on the Saskatchewan border when the contract with the mine’s owner ended last summer.

PPS is still growing the marijuana for the government, but the location of the operation must remain confidential under federal regulations, Zettl says.

Rumour has it the cannabis crop is being grown somewhere in Saskatchewan, a theory Zettl cannot comment on. He can say only that the operation is somewhere in Canada.

“North of the 49th and in between the Atlantic and the Pacific and Arctic oceans, that’s where it is,” he says with a smile.

Although the high-profile, legal and still-controversial practice of growing medical marijuana is what PPS is best known for, Zettl hopes the distinction will change over time.

“I think a lot of people forget this is a contract we bid on,” he says. “But we had a bigger purpose in mind. . . . Although it’s our reputation at this point, we’re trying to change that.”

The company, along with the Plant Biotechnology Institute, has designed a plant to produce a therapeutic enzyme known as adenosine deaminase, or ADA. The enzyme, Zettl explains, is part of the body’s immune system and is deficient in people with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCIDS), a condition often referred to as bubble-boy syndrome.

People with the disease must undergo enzyme-replacement therapy, Zettl says, and at the moment, most of the ADA used in the treatment is purified from cow spleens.

PPS’s ADA takes the animal out of the equation.

“We’ve successfully designed a plant to make that very same enzyme – except a human form of it – in the plant,” he says. “Now we’re at a point where we’re just purifying it enough to see if we can get it to clinical trial.”

The hope is to one day turn the enzyme into medicine for SCIDS patients, Zettl says, adding PPS is working on isolating three other enzymes using the plant system.

“It’s still a form of agriculture, but it’s again where that convergence of pharmacy and agriculture are combining to produce more effective medicines,” he says

The cannabis side of the business, he adds, has helped PPS move forward with its therapeutic enzyme studies, with growing conditions, industry standards and pharmaceutical credibility supporting its scientific work.

Zettl can see the enzyme development becoming a much more significant part of the company’s business plan.

“I think the market potential for Prairie Plants extends far beyond medical marijuana into these other areas. We think there’s much larger potential than that,” he says.

Meanwhile, the company’s environmental division, which helps mining companies reclaim work sites, continues to operate. So too does PPS’s bio products division – the segment that started the business back in 1988 – which sells fruit plants and seed potatoes to farmers.

On the company’s mission to “improve” its reputation, Zettl concludes the enzyme work will help PPS both grow its revenues and create a new identity. At the same time, he says, the medical marijuana side of the company’s business isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

“We’re on a mission to produce these other higher-value enzymes in plants,” he says. “It doesn’t mean that we’re going to ignore the other side at all.”

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California Grand Jury says government could benefit from legal pot: County could see $7.5 million gain from new taxes and decreased costs

29 June, 23:14, by admin Tags: , ,

SANTA CRUZ – Local governments could cash in on legal pot to the tune of $7.5 million, a new Santa Cruz County Grand Jury report concludes.

The analysis of the financial impact of Proposition 19, a measure on the Nov. 2 statewide ballot, which seeks to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana, is one of several reports released Tuesday by the Grand Jury – and no doubt the most unusual.

As is typical, the Grand Jury spent the past year studying various government agencies, and in its final report raises issues and makes recommendations for the studied programs and groups, including the County Jail, the public defender’s contract, a drug treatment website and the Watsonville Personnel Commission, as well as for public libraries and the Lompico Water District, sections that were previously released.

But the pot report aimed to scrutinize the finances without weighing in on the issue.

“At the end of the day it’s up to the voters,” said Patrick Henderson, who chaired the marijuana committee. “We didn’t look into the morality of it, just the dollars and cents impact on Santa Cruz.”

The report, which opens with a light-hearted preamble titled “Getting the Dope on Dope: The Grand Jury Attempts to Clear the Smoke in the Joint from the Numbers,” derives some of its data from statewide estimates of marijuana use and enforcement costs. It also looked at local crime statistics.

Santa Cruz Police spokesman Zach Friend questioned one piece of data.

He said department figures from 2008 show 315 adult arrests/citations, while the Grand Jury report says there were 724. Friend said adults are the “overwhelming” majority when it comes to arrests and citations for marijuana.

Henderson said all the numbers came from the agencies themselves.

“If the data’s wrong, it’s because they gave us the wrong data,” he said.

The report assumes pot would cost $100 an ounce, that 19 million ounces would be sold statewide, and that the county would impose a $50-per-ounce tax. Under that scenario the county would collect $129,200 in sales taxes and $6.46 million from its pot tax.

The county also would lose about $400,000 in fines, seized property and enforcement grants, but would save $1.36 million in arrest, prosecution and incarceration costs, the report says.

What’s unknown, Henderson said, are the potential costs of legalizing the drug, lost productivity and addiction treatment, for example.

Supervisor Tony Campos, who is serving as board chair, hasn’t taken a position on Proposition 19, but he said he’s seen a huge change in attitudes about marijuana, even among some in law enforcement, during his 12 years in office. His “gut feeling” is that the measure will pass. If it does, he’s willing to tax sales.

“We sure could use it … to help our county pay for law enforcement, mental health services, health care for our elderly, to make sure there’s child care, and probably No. 1, to make sure our schools have money,” he said.

Santa Cruz Mayor Mike Rotkin, who favors legalizing pot with “reasonable regulation,” said his city can’t go it alone, but if state voters approve the measure, “it would be a good thing.” Marijuana is not more dangerous than alcohol, he said, and much of the problem revolves around its status as an illegal substance, violent turf wars, for example.

“We certainly would tax the hell out of it,” Rotkin said. “Certainly, it’s not a necessity. It’s a luxury.”

2010 Grand JURY REPORT

Watsonville Personnel Commission

The fairness of an Aug. 20 hearing was questioned after the department head defending against an employee complaint attended a dinner with commissioners beforehand. The jury concluded that the hearing was fair, commended the commission for its process, but said the dinner, while legal, could have resulted in the appearance of bias, and recommended limiting future dinners to commissioners, their legal counsel and recording secretary.

RecoveryWave.com

The jury commended county health officials for a website that provides information about recovery and addiction treatment programs, but said accuracy of information should be verified and updated, and a disclaimer should be more prominent to avoid the appearance of official endorsement of private services.

Public Defender’s Contract

The jury recommended the county make its contract with a private law firm for public defenders services more transparent by adding an audit clause and consider opening the contract to a competitive bidding process. The same firm has provided legal representation for indigent defendants in the county for 35 years and the jury noted that services have been satisfactory. This year’s contract costs the county more than $5.2 million.

For details, visit www.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/grandjury/

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The Battle Over Medical Marijuana In NJ

21 June, 18:33, by admin Tags: ,

Haddonfield, NJ – New Jersey’s medical marijuana activists are upset about a report that Gov. Chris Christie wants
to make the state’s law legalizing cannabis to treat some conditions more restrictive. Fox 29′s Julie Kim spoke with a woman who says she hopes the Governor makes up his mind, sooner, rather than later. Just before Christie took office, Gov. Jon Corzine signed the law to allow medical marijuana.

Christie has been asking lawmakers to delay the start of sales –now scheduled for Oct. 1 — to give his administration time to draft regulations. The Star-Ledger of Newark reported Friday that he’s floated other changes to the law, including having Rutgers University grow the pot and letting hospitals distribute it.

The current law calls for it to be grown and distributed by private groups. Changes would need legislative approval.

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Medical marijuana clubs raided in Montreal

03 June, 13:38, by admin Tags: , ,

Montreal police are in the process of raiding four clubs that provide marijuana for people who need it for medical purposes.

“They just walked in out of nowhere, showed us the paper and said, ‘There’s the warrant,’” said Maria Koklas, a volunteer at the Culture 420 compassion club in Lachine.

“There’s about 15 to 20 cops in here walking around inside the dispensary taking all of our membership IDs, asking them for all their personal information, asking them for their criminal records and letting them know if they don’t have criminal records they will be free to go.”

Police are also carrying out operations at three compassion clubs on the Plateau Mont-Royal.

Some people have complained about having the clubs in their neighbourhoods, while those who run the clubs say they are often hassled by police.

Koklas said the police gave no reason for the raid.

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Medical Marijuana Drives Down Prices in California

28 May, 02:02, by admin Tags: ,

Wholesale marijuana prices in California have fallen from about $5,000 per pound in the Reagan era to less than $2,000 per pound today due in part to increased competition spurred by the state’s medical-marijuana laws, NPR reported May 15.

“Outdoor growers are having a hard time unloading their fall harvest,” said Charley Custer, a community activist in Humboldt County, a hotbed of marijuana cultivation in California. “And this is six months later and when some people do move it, they don’t get nearly the price they were hoping for.”

Local police confirm that growers are having a hard time selling their processed marijuana. The popularity (and potency) of indoor-grown marijuana also is helping drive down the price of lower-quality, outdoor-grown pot.

“What’s happening is the people that don’t have quality product aren’t selling it,” said Tim Blake, who organizes the annual Emerald Cup competition to honor the best marijuana grown in California. “So they’re the ones that are creating this panic. So it really comes back down to that, just like in every other agricultural industry. When you get too many vineyards and too many people growing vines out there, then only the good ones make it.”

Market economics could weed out the less-competitive producers, observers said.

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Before it’s law, medical-marijuana bill already triggering challenges

24 May, 02:47, by admin Tags: , ,

Even before Gov. Bill Ritter has signed into law new rules for Colorado’s medical-marijuana industry, the next moves in the ongoing chess match of cannabis regulation and adaptation are already taking shape.

Last week, a team of attorneys who specialize in medical-marijuana cases met with several dozen potential plaintiffs in preparing a lawsuit to challenge the rules as unconstitutionally restrictive.

At the other end of the spectrum, prosecutors and others who believe the legislature overstepped its authority in liberalizing marijuana regulations were pondering their legal options.

City councils that have been unreceptive to medical-marijuana dispensaries began taking steps to formally ban them — something the new rules would allow them to do.

Meanwhile, dispensary owners and independent marijuana growers engaged in a mad scramble for dance partners to comply with the rules’ requirement that dispensaries grow at least 70 percent of the marijuana they sell.

The rules — spelled out in House Bill 1284 and Senate Bill 109 — require dispensaries to be licensed at the state and local levels.

Dispensary owners must pass a criminal-background check and have lived in the state for two years, with some exceptions. Local governments or voters can ban dispensaries but not small-scale caregivers, who could serve no more than five medical-marijuana patients.

Lawyer and medical-marijuana advocate Jessica Corry said the five-patient caregiver limit, the residency requirement for dispensary owners and the option for local dispensary bans are “an incredible slap in the face to the (state) constitution.”

Corry is one of the attorneys who have been meeting with medical-marijuana patients and dispensary owners to put together a lawsuit challenging the rules.

If that lawsuit materializes, it could have company in the courts from a challenge that questions whether dispensaries are even legal.

Adams County District Attorney Don Quick said dispensary opponents may look at tacking on a counterclaim to any lawsuit that dispensary advocates file.

Quick said Amendment 20, the voter-approved measure that created the state’s medical-marijuana system, did not give lawmakers the authority to allow commercial dispensaries.

“This is (lawmakers) rebalancing the line the citizens approved in 2000, and they don’t have the right to do that,” Quick said.

Other cities act

A number of local governments have wasted no time in responding to the new rules.

In a study session last week, Greenwood Village’s City Council instructed city staffers to draft an ordinance banning dispensaries, said Ryan Greg ory, the assistant to the city manager.

Friday, Aurora’s City Council took the first step toward putting a ballot question banning dispensaries before voters in November.

Boulder County’s planning commission gave an OK to a set of regulations governing where dispensaries and marijuana-growing facilities could locate in the county.

The frenzy of moves has been dizzying to dispensary owners, who have until July 1 to apply for a local license and Sept. 1 to prove they are growing 70 percent of the marijuana they sell.

Laurel Alterman, the owner of AlterMeds in Louisville, said the uncertain local regulations have made it nearly impossible to know if the plans she is making now to comply with state rules will hold up in a few months.

“We are really, really scrambling right now,” she said. “There are so many layers to this.”

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Bong Hits for Boomers: Marijuana Smoking on Rise for Seniors

24 February, 02:48, by admin Tags: , ,

Some Baby Boomers aren’t giving up smoking pot as they age. Others are coming back to it as they retire.

In her 88 years, Florence Siegel has learned how to relax: a glass of red wine; a crisp copy of The New York Times, if she can wrest it from her husband; some classical music, preferably Bach; and every night like clockwork she lifts a pipe to her lips and smokes marijuana.

A survey by the federal government found the percentage of people 50 and older using marijuana went from 1.9 percent in 2002 to 2.9 percent in 2008.

The rise was most dramatic among 55- to 59-year-olds. Their reported marijuana use more than tripled from 1.6 percent in 2002 to 5.1 percent. Observers expect further increases as 78 million boomers born between 1945 and 1964 age.

Among them is Perry Parks, 67, of Rockingham, N.C., a retired Army pilot who suffered crippling pain from degenerative disc disease and arthritis. He had tried all sorts of drugs, from Vioxx to epidural steroids, but found little success.

About two years ago he turned to marijuana, which he first had tried in college, and was amazed how well it worked for the pain.

“I realized I could get by without the narcotics,” Parks said, referring to prescription painkillers. “I am essentially pain free.”

For many seniors, smoking pot was something they at least tried in high school or college and doesn’t have the stigma it had for those born earlier.

But older users could be at risk for falls if they become dizzy and smoking it increases the risk of heart disease and it can cause cognitive impairment, said Dr. William Dale, chief of geriatrics and palliative medicine at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

Dennis Day, a 61-year-old attorney in Columbus, Ohio, said when he used to get high, he wore dark glasses to disguise his red eyes, feared talking to people on the street and worried about encountering police. With age, he says, any drawbacks to the drug have disappeared.

“My eyes no longer turn red, I no longer get the munchies,” Day said. “The primary drawbacks to me now are legal.”

Siegel bucks the trend as someone who was well into her 50s before she tried pot for the first time. She can muster only one frustration with the drug.

“I never learned how to roll a joint,” she said. “It’s just a big nuisance. It’s much easier to fill a pipe.”

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Medical Marijuana Legal in 14 States – See list below

14 February, 14:20, by admin Tags: , ,

Article corrected – its 14 states now – we added New Jersey. For a convenient chart check out:
http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/viewresource.asp?resourceID=000881

Progress seems to be being made in the USA. Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington and Vermont are states where you can legally use marijuana as prescribed by a doctor. This is great news for many people suffering from illnesses where marijuana can help. There is still a long way to go but the future is looking brighter for the USA.

The safest delivery method is to use a vaporizor. This is a 100% smokeless system whereby you heat the marijuana to a specific temperature that releases the THC. This eliminates the hacking and coughing normally associated with marijuana, and also eliminates the risk of chronic bronchitis among other smoke related illnesses that can occur.

The safest way to get the marijuana is to grow it yourself. Great progress has been made with home-growing operations. We suggest you take a look at the Aero Garden. The Aero Garden is a home hydroponic system used by 250,000 people worldwide to grow herbs, vegtables and flowers. The Aero Garden Pro 200 has an adjustable light mast that can extend up to 2 feet. This is the way things are going so users can save money and grow at home. Every 10 weeks you should be able to harvest enough to last you through to another 10 weeks, depending on how much you’re using.

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