Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2000 Source: Record, The (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Record Contact: P.O. Box 900, Stockton, CA 95201 Fax: (209) 547-8186 Website: http://www.recordnet.com/ Author: Francis P. Garland, Lode Bureau Chief Note: The author's phone number is (209)736-9554 Bookmark: MAP's link to this and other stories from California: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ca CALAVERAS NAMES MEDICAL MARIJUANA PANEL SAN ANDREAS -- A panel topheavy with health and law enforcement officials was appointed Monday to develop guidelines for medical marijuana use in Calaveras County. One known medical marijuana user was named to the 12 member task force, which includes five doctors, two pharmacists, two members of the county Health Services Agency, Sheriff Dennis Downum, Angels Camp Police Chief Bill Nuttall and District Attorney Peter Smith. The task force was created on the same day San Francisco supervisors adopted a plan to issue identification cards to medical marijuana users. A handful of of the California counties have put in place medical marijuana ordinances. David Jack, an Angels Camp resident and medical marijuana user who brought the medical marijuana issue to the supervisors last month said the county needs guidelines because people with the right to use marijuana under California's Proposition 215 and law enforcement alike are "living in confusion." Jack will be on the task force. Jack asked supervisors to include more users and fewer law enforcement officials. Jack Shields, who called himself the only recognized medical marijuana patient in the county, agreed. Shields said the issue was a medical one. Proposition 215, passed by voters in 1996, made it legal for people suffering from certain serious medical conditions to use marijuana if they have a doctors recommendation or approval. But the ambiguities remain about how the law should be implemented, and marijuana use and possession remains a federal crime. Jeanne M. Boyce, the county's Health Services Agency director, said the panel's makeup is designed to promote "frank, qualitive discussion among the interested parties." Supervisor Terri Baily and Paul Stein voted against the task force appointments because they said the state-not individual cities and counties-should formulate guidelines. Stein, who admitted having a problem with the concept of medical marijuana users growing their own medicine, said it's "absolute folly" for county workers to devote time to create "something that is flawed from the beginning." Supervisor Merita Callaway, who supported the appointments along with Supervisor Lucy Thein and board Chairman Tom Tryon, called the panel a "good cross-section of people." Downum said before the meeting that "universal state guidelines" are needed to help law enforcement cope with Prop. 215. In lieu of those, though, he said he'd like to see guidelines that he an District Attorney Smith can agree upon and can be shared with the public. "It doesn't do us a bit of good to arrest someone if the district attorney doesn't feel comfortable moving ahead with prosecution," he said. Downnum doesn't mask his feelings for Prop. 215, however. "It's just a horrendous joke," he said. "It's pathetic. And without state guidelines, everyone is kind of groping around." "I truly believe society needs to determine if they want to keep marijuana illegal or not." Smith said he believes Prop. 215 guidelines should come from the state but added that he's willing to work with the task force. "My biggest concern is that I'm not a medical doctor, so how much (marijuana) a person should possess for a particular disease is beyond my expertise," he said. "And I don't want guidelines to be an invitation for everyone interested in growing and using marijuana to come to Calaveras County, either." That hasn't proven to be the case in Mendicino County, which has a policy that allows bona fide medical marijuana users who are first checked out by the county's public health department to possess 12 immature marijuana plants, six flowering plants or two pounds of processed marijuana. The public health department must verify that a prescriptive user has a doctors recommendation before an identification card is issued, said Norman L. Vroman, Mendicino County's district attorney. "It's alleviated a lot of problems," said Vroman. "It's given law enforcement some guidelines. And it's stopped my phone from ringing off the hook." - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst