cannabisnews.com: Distributing Marijuana





Distributing Marijuana
Posted by FoM on May 01, 2000 at 09:17:28 PT
Editorial
Source: Bangor Daily News
Having approved the medicinal use of marijuana last November, Mainers will have to wait until at least this coming November, and possibly longer, before sick people can receive the drug. That may be for the best.LD 2580, a bill that would have put a registration and distribution system in place to get seized marijuana to the sick, was amended into a study commission led by the Attorney General’s Office. 
That task force, which meets for the first time May 9, is expected to come up with ways to honor the voters’ will by Oct. 1.The bill was relegated to study for two reasons, said Sen. Judy Paradis, D-French-ville, co-chairman of the committee that oversaw the bill: Legislators didn’t want to act without a better understanding of the ramifications; and one of the potential ramifications tossed up by law enforcement was the loss of millions of dollars of Department of Justice grants.Justice grants money for a variety of purposes to Maine each year: DARE, domestic violence programs, anti-crime, the COPS program for funding additional police officers. Last year alone, Maine received at least $2.5 million in DOJ grants, and at least $1 million of that for domestic violence prevention.Put aside, for the moment, the shaky idea of handing out as medicine a pot crop grown under uncertain conditions in someone’s back yard. The fear among many in law enforcement — a fear voiced to legislators by Maine Drug Enforcement Agency Director Roy McKinney — is that forcing MDEA to turn over seized marijuana to the sick would be a violation of federal law, one that might lead Justice to shut off the flow of money to Maine.That’s hard to swallow, because apparently no one at Justice has specifically told anyone in Maine’s law enforcement community that distributing pot would end or impede federal grants here. And it doesn’t consider the one real-world experience the nation has with a state distributing marijuana to the sick.California began opening marijuana clubs in 1998, two years after that state’s voters approved medicinal marijuana. Justice, in turn, started shutting those clubs down. The city of Oakland, Calif., in an effort to get around the Drug Enforce-ment Agency, went so far as to make its marijuana club a city agency, to protect the program from federal agents. Even today, some counties in California distribute pot in violation of Justice’s wishes; San Francisco is soon to launch a distribution program, too.But California still gets Justice dollars. Last year, at the height of the dope war between Justice and California, DOJ gave the Golden State some $13.2 million in domestic violence funding — almost twice what New York, the next largest recipient, received. Even in 1998, as Oakland was circumventing DOJ’s will, that city received federal money for a program to prevent juvenile handgun violence.Director McKinney is correct in noting the federal government has to decide to play ball at some point on this issue, since it ultimately decides not only what is an illegal drug, but also ultimately holds the power over which drugs doctors may prescribe. But the task force should be less concerned about the potential loss of federal dollars and more concerned about the quality of the drug that Mainers are to receive. That’s one reason the delay that the task force creates makes sense. Its members, for instance, might look to the U.K. Medicinal Cannabis Project, which under the regulatory standards of the Medicines Control Agency in the United Kingdom and the Food and Drug Administration here, is conducting research on nonsmoked can-nabis-based medicines. It received ap-proval last month to begin patient trials and plans to examine the effects of cannabis on everything from AIDS wasting illnesses and asthma to schizophrenia and Tourette’s syndrome.The results of this research will take time and there certainly should be ways to safely distribute medicinal marijuana in the meantime, but the ad lib method under consideration in Maine promises to create problems of quality control. Given the recent concerns the federal and some state governments have expressed over the lack of control in the growing herbal remedy industry, a state could hardly enter that industry with marijuana without seeming hypocritical.Two-thirds of the states have approved some form of medicinal marijuana — Hawaii being the latest. Maine legislators have been remarkably willing to make up for Congress’ weaknesses by taking the lead on issues such as prescription drug price controls; they should show similar strength toward medicinal marijuana, helping to put pressure on Congress to identify and approve well-researched methods of delivery for cannabis when it is appropriate. Published: May 1, 2000©2000 Bangor Daily News. Related Articles: Editorial: Maine's Medicinal Marijuana Loophole http://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5150.shtmlIdea Goes Busthttp://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5138.shtmlMarijuana Group To Teach Patient To Grow Their Ownhttp://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5117.shtmlMarijuana Distribution by State Debated http://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5072.shtmlBill Would Let State Supply Medical Marijuana Userhttp://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5059.shtmlState Would Distribute Confiscated Marijuana http://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread5057.shtmlCannabisNews Articles From Maine:http://alltheweb.com/cgi-bin/asearch?type=all&query=cannabisnews+maine
END SNIP -->
Snipped
Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help




Comment #2 posted by Gary Storck on May 01, 2000 at 13:57:41 PT
Wait?
The Editorial states, "Having approved the medicinal use of marijuana last November, Mainers will have to wait until at least this coming November, and possibly longer, before sick people can receive the drug. That may be for the best."Will it be "for the best" if Mainers who need medicinal cannabis die while they are waiting for legislators to carry out the will of the people? Will it be "for the best" if they have to face pain, glaucoma, AIDS, cancer, et al, and not be able to exercise every therapeutic option available?What good is a legislature that does nothing when citizens have spoken? Mainers need MMJ now! That would be for the best!
Is My Medicine Legal Yet?
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #1 posted by Dankhank on May 01, 2000 at 13:29:54 PT:
Extortion ........
Let's see if I get it right ...Because of state-level medical marijuana laws, the Federal Government may allow, nay, foster an increase in domestic violence and juevenile handgun use.Wow! Depths of Depravity still to sink into ...As the Federal Government goes marching along ...
Hemp N Stuff
[ Post Comment ]

Post Comment


Name: Optional Password: 
E-Mail: 
Subject: 
Comment: [Please refrain from using profanity in your message]
Link URL: 
Link Title: