Pubdate: Sun, 14 May 2000 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2000 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: Address: 1355 Mountain Avenue, Winnipeg Manitoba R2X 3B6 Fax: (204) 697-7288 Feedback: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/letters_to_editor/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Author: Mia Rabson MARIJUANA CROP LIGHTS UP MANITOBA GROWERS' EYES Scramble On To Supply High-Grade Drug For Medicinal Trials Manitobans are lining up to grow high-grade pot for Health Minister Allan Rock. As of noon Friday, nearly 90 different companies and individuals across Canada, including 10 from Manitoba, had requested information from Ottawa on its clinical trials of marijuana to determine its medicinal value. John Skuba thinks becoming the federal marijuana supplier could be a good expansion of his alfalfa farm in Fisher Branch. "I'm a farmer and I thought the money could be good," he said. But Skuba isn't sure if he will be able to compete with big greenhouses around the country, or even be allowed to apply because of strict rules laid down by Ottawa. The health minister -- who asked for submissions last week -- intends the cannabis contract to be for up to a five-year term. It involves setting up a marijuana factory to grow, process and store marijuana for use in medical trials. Skuba isn't sure he will be able to put together an operation big enough to do all of that, but he knows he could produce good marijuana. "It's pretty elaborate, but I know how to grow things," he said. Patrick Romeo, marketing and business development representative for Websar Laboratories in Ste. Anne, said Rock's marijuana request caught his company's attention. Websar is an analytical lab specializing in environmental assessments. Romeo said growing marijuana may be a good option for business growth, but they haven't determined whether it's possible yet. "There are so many regulations, we have to look at whether we can justify even taking it on," Romeo said. Shaun Crew, president of a hemp food production company in St. Norbert, said his company's experience with growing hemp, a form of cannabis with very low levels of the stimulant, THC, would make them ideal candidates for the contract. "We have a lot of the required resources to grow medicinal marijuana and I think we'd do a good job at it," Crew said. "It's somewhat parallel to what we've been doing with hemp." The federal government intends to review the applications after the June 6 submission date, and to have a contract in place sometime this summer. There has been inconclusive evidence that marijuana can help suppress nausea and stimulate appetite in AIDS and cancer patients, relieve muscle pain and spasms in people with multiple sclerosis and reduce the frequency of epileptic seizures. Recently, many Canadians have pressured the federal government to legalize marijuana for medicinal use. Other interested growers include farmers, greenhouse operations hemp farmers and experts in alternative medicine from Prince Edward Island to North Vancouver. The McGill University Health Centre in Montreal has also submitted its name, as had something called Holy Smoke in British Columbia. Potential growers from California and Massachusetts have also submitted their names. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea