Pubdate: Wed, 06 Dec 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/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) WRONG PRESCRIPTION Supreme Court Has Chance To Make Sure Medical Pot Goes Through Proper Hoops When Proposition 215 was passed in California four years ago, many predicted the issue of marijuana-as-medicine would eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court. It has. Last week, the justices agreed -- in the midst of hearing arguments on the presidential stalemate -- to weigh in on a somewhat smaller matter: whether an Oakland cannabis club should be allowed to distribute marijuana as a "medical necessity." A ruling is expected by June. The high court has an opportunity to step in and stop California's latest cottage industry before further legitimacy and momentum takes hold. It won't be an easy decision for this court, which in recent years has ruled more frequently for states' rights than not. The dilemma is whether to side with California or U.S. regulatory powers (both Clinton and Congress are waging war on illegal drugs). Proposition 215 has opened up a host of problems, creating a new California industry that plants, cultivates, harvests and distributes Cannabis sative (marijuana). It does so largely without regulation. As we said in 1996 urging voters to reject this initiative: If there is a proper medical use -- and the evidence of that is at best conflicting -- it should be handled like any other drug. For us, that remains the heart of this issue. As long as pot is possessed and grown for anything, according to the initiative "for which marijuana provides relief," it is ripe for abuse, open to recreational purposes and sends the wrong message to young people. This is not to say we don't recognize the potential for pot's medicinal value, but the answer will not be found in loose-knit, unregulated, statewide cooperatives. It will be found in research laboratories and hospitals. It needs to be administered in a different form than smoking and under a doctor's strict prescription plan. Marijuana should be handled like any other FDA-approved drug -- not unlike today's restrictive, case-by-case use of morphine or even Marinol (a synthetic form of pot). Unless new criteria is met, California's cannabis clubs, undoubtedly meeting the needs of many sufferers, will be ripe for misuse and fraudulent claims. However loathe to strike down a state initiative, the Supreme Court surely will see the larger problem of creating federal law that promotes use of an illegal drug in a loosely regulated fashion. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F