Pubdate: Sun, 19 Aug 2001 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Dale Bass LAW PUTS PRIVACY AT STAKE Canada's move into medical marijuana is pitting one right against another and program advocates say patients are losing out. When applying to Health Canada, people living in rental accommodation and requesting permission to grow marijuana must have a consent form completed by their landlord. Paul Lagace, client services co-ordinator at the AIDS Society of Kamloops, is concerned this will lead to people feeling obliged to reveal their medical condition to their landlords. He says this is an unconscionable violation of the confidentiality between patient and doctor. Legace adds he is also concerned it will open people to discrimination if landlords feel they have one of the ailments covered by the program. Ailments covered in the regulations include AIDS/HIV, multiple sclerosis, spinal-cord injury or disease, cancer, epilepsy and some forms of arthritis. Health Canada media relations officer Paige Raymond-Kovach says landlords have the right to know marijuana is being grown on their property. She says the form does not include medical information and property owners need not be told the tenant is an applicant. "You can be a designate, too. There's nothing which requires you to say if you're applying to cultivate it for yourself or if you're applying to be a designate and cultivate it for someone else." Under the regulations, people can be approved to grow marijuana for others who will use it medicinally. Raymond-Kovach adds the form is separate from the application to further protect the individual. "There's nothing at all on it to indicate they're an applicant, if they are." If a property owner refuses to sign the form, however, the application is considered incomplete, she adds, and won't be processed. Regardless, Lagace is angry at the requirement for permission. "If you say you're a designate, the landlord can say 'no' to you and then, what do you do? If you tell your landlord you're an applicant, well, then he knows you have one of the diseases and it could lead to all kinds of things. "Why do you need permission anyhow? Do you need permission to have morphine in your home? Do you need permission to have penicillin in your home? Do you need permission to grow tomatoes in your home? "Why do these people have to get permission from their landlords?" Lagace says he sees no legal reason for the requirement. "They're just covering their butts." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom