Pubdate: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2001, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Graeme Smith NEW POT LAW CUTS ACCESS, ACTIVISTS SAY Officials Should Make Getting Medical Marijuana Easier For Sufferers, Woman Says TORONTO -- Denise Beaudoin doesn't look like a pot-smoking activist. The quiet 56-year-old from Hull is more comfortable sewing needlepoint than protesting against drug policy. But Ms. Beaudoin was bold enough to accept a marijuana joint passed among a dozen patients with chronic diseases who demonstrated as she did on the steps of a courthouse in downtown Toronto yesterday. Ms. Beaudoin joined the protesters who say the new marijuana law makes it more difficult than ever to get medical pot. "It makes me angry," said Ms. Beaudoin, who has lived with constant pain since a collision with a drunk driver in 1989 broke her legs, hip, pelvis and back. She used marijuana instead of painkillers for three years, until police raided her basement hydroponics lab last summer. Since then, she has been trying to gain permission to use pot legally, but the system is a bureaucratic morass, she said. In the meantime, she's been forced to replace her marijuana regimen with 46 prescriptions for various pills that make her intestines crack and bleed. "The process is so difficult," said her husband, Ray Turmel, 49, hefting a five-centimetre-thick sheaf of court documents and medical records accumulated during their fight to use marijuana for medical reasons. "And they're making the rules even harder." Five of the protesters, including Ms. Beaudoin, are asking the courts to compel Health Canada to grant them permission to smoke the drug legally. Their cases were heard yesterday in federal court on University Avenue but were deferred to an Ottawa court next week. It was just another delay for sufferers such as Barry Burkholder, 36, of Sudbury. He's been fighting for two years to smoke marijuana legally to treat hepatitis C. "They make the process so hard that people are giving up," Mr. Burkholder said. These people scoff at suggestions the new laws will allow better access to medical marijuana. The process is already too elaborate, they say, requiring detailed submissions from their doctors. Now most applicants will also need letters from medical specialists and more paperwork. "What's being released to the media isn't what these applicants are experiencing," Stuart Chamney, 41, said. His wife, Marylynne Chamney, 37, who has epilepsy, is among the applicants taking the government to court. But Health Canada spokeswoman Roslyn Tremblay said the expanded requirements are needed to define medical necessity and ensure proper safeguards. "The whole intention was to make sure the process was more transparent." It's only logical to include more medical specialists in the application process, Ms. Tremblay said. "Would they not be interested in knowing that their patient is using marijuana?" she asked. Dianne Bruce, 37, is worried about the new laws for a different reason: She grows marijuana in her back yard in Colborne, Ont. Her operation used to be legal, she said, because her 40 customers had medical permission. But now medical users are not allowed to obtain marijuana from growers with criminal records, and Ms. Bruce has been convicted of drug offences. "I'm not supposed to continue helping people," Ms. Bruce said. Despite the difficulties, Ms. Beaudoin and the other patients say they'll keep fighting. "I don't go anywhere any more," Ms. Beaudoin said, "except doctors, hospitals, tests. . . ." ". . . and courthouses," her husband said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens