Pubdate: Wed, 02 Aug 2000 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2000 Southam Inc. Contact: 300 - 1450 Don Mills Road, Don Mills, Ontario M3B 3R5 Fax: (416) 442-2209 Feedback: http://www.nationalpost.com/commentary.asp?s2letters Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~nationalpost THE WEED THAT SOOTHES Like four out of five Canadians, we support the use of marijuana for medical purposes. And so we are happy with the decision issued on Monday by the Ontario Court of Appeal in the case of R. v. Parker. In that case, the court found that Terrance Parker, an epilepsy sufferer who uses marijuana to prevent seizures, has a constitutional right to smoke and grow pot. The court also declared the prohibition on possession of marijuana contained in the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) to be flawed. If Parliament does not amend the law within a year in order to provide greater access for medicinal marijuana users, the prohibition against marijuana possession will be "of no force and effect" in Ontario. But while we agree with the result of the judgment, we are disturbed by the fact that judges, not legislators, have taken the lead in modernizing Canada's marijuana law. Canada's Health Department has dragged its feet pitifully over the years. When the CDSA came into being in 1996, Section 56 provided that otherwise proscribed drug use may be exempted from the provisions of the CDSA if the drugs in question serve a "medical or scientific purpose." But until 1998, the Health Ministry had never considered a single applicant under Section 56. In fact, as frustrated AIDS sufferers learned, the department did not even have an application procedure for would-be exemptees. Allan Rock's ministry created a set of such procedures only when its hand was forced as a result of a suit brought by Toronto AIDS patient James Wakeford. In Monday's Parker decision, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that the current Section 56 procedures, though better than nothing, are inadequate. Marijuana is a proven and effective medicine for several serious, life-threatening conditions. Tens of thousands of Canadians can benefit from medical marijuana, yet only about 60 have received permission under Section 56 in the last year. As the court noted, "it reposes in the [Health] Minister an absolute discretion based on the Minister's opinion whether an exception is 'necessary for a medical ... purpose,' a phrase that is not defined in the Act," and "even if the Minister were of the opinion that the applicant had met the medical necessity requirement, the legislation does not require the Minister to give an exemption. The section only states that the Minister 'may' give an exemption." For these and other reasons, the judges concluded that Section 56 of the CDSA, in its present form, "is not consistent with the principles of fundamental justice." And so now, the ball is in the federal government's court. The CDSA must be reformed to give Canadians the access to medical marijuana they want and need. The solution is to put marijuana dispensation in the control of the same people we rely upon to dispense a whole range of other controlled medicines: doctors. If, as most Canadians agree, marijuana has use as a medicine, then let us treat it as one. RELATED SITES National Academy of Sciences Read the study, prepared by the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics. http://www.nas.edu/ NAP reading room Read the study 'Marijuana and Medicine', prepared by the National Academy Press. http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/enter2.cgi?0309071550.html American Medical Association Discussion, bulletin boards and chat for medicial professionals in the U.S. http://www.ama-assn.org/ Marijuana as Medicine Information about medical uses of marijuana, clinical studies and reform efforts. http://www.marijuana-as-medicine.org/ Epilepsy Canada Basic information resource about epilespy. http://www.epilepsy.ca/eng/mainset.html - --- MAP posted-by: greg