Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2001 Source: Medford Mail Tribune (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Mail Tribune Contact: http://www.mailtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/642 Author: Russell Sadler Note: Veteran columnist Russell Sadler teaches journalism and environmental studies at Southern Oregon University in Ashland. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) COURT VS. VOTERS Feds Have No Business Regulating Medical Marijuana As Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden continues his valiant fight against efforts to weaken or abolish the state's physician-assisted-suicide law, another voter-approved law is headed for a showdown with an adversary more powerful than Congress. The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments last week in a case that could overturn laws in Oregon and eight other states that allow seriously ill people to use marijuana as a medicine. The justices' remarks made it clear they will likely side with federal authorities who want to shut down California's "cannabis clubs" that were formed to distribute the drug to patients. Oregon voters passed a medical marijuana initiative in 1998. We supported the concept of a workable law to allow medical use of marijuana, but opposed the initiative on the grounds that it contained too many flaws. We now consider the federal government's attempts to overrule state medical marijuana laws in the same light as congressional moves against the assisted-suicide statute. This is an arena where the federal government has no business. Opponents of medical marijuana laws call them the first step toward legalization of all illegal drugs, and argue that such laws fly in the face of federal anti-drug efforts on all levels. Supporters point to scientific research concluding that marijuana can be effective in controlling the nausea brought on by chemotherapy and the pain associated with terminal illness. We are not advocating the wholesale legalization of marijuana or any other illegal substance. We do respect the judgment of voters who decided that terminally ill people should have the right to end their own lives and the right to use a substance that eases the pain and suffering their illnesses cause. The Clinton administration threatened to revoke the prescription licenses of California doctors who recommended marijuana. That was the same tactic threatened against Oregon physicians who prescribed lethal doses of medication under the assisted-suicide law. In either case, it was a heavy-handed use of federal power. We now have an administration supposedly run by conservative Republicans. A Supreme Court dominated by conservatives -- and a White House dedicated to Republican values -- should adhere to those principles, which include the rights of states to govern themselves without interference from Washington. But we are not confident that will happen in this case. Bush Tries To Use Northwest To Repay Contributors The haste with which the Bush administration is paying off its cronies and campaign contributors suggests the Bushmen and women have doubts the restoration will have a second term in the White House. Now, some of the administration's recent efforts to reward its political friends and punish political enemies threatens new and established tourism assets in the Northwest. Hiding behind the expedient fig leaf of "consulting local officials," the Bush administration says it is considering reducing the size of the new Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument southeast of Ashland. The Bush administration insists its motives are based on protecting "property rights," despite the fact the monument proclamation is limited to land management policies on federal public lands in the designated area. The Bureau of Land Management and the Bureau of Indian Affairs announced they will offer mining leases on thousands of acres in the Columbia Gorge owned by American Indians. Both federal agencies have ignored their legal duty to manage American Indian land for the economic benefit of the tribes for decades. The new administration's meretricious interest in tribal economic development interests reeks of political porkbarreling. The administration's sudden attack on the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument perpetuates the myth that its designation in June last year was a hasty, ill-considered decision made in Washington. President Clinton's designation of the area as a national monument culminated 18 years of patient work by the Soda Mountain Wilderness Council to persuade the BLM to manage the area to reflect its unique botanical and geological characteristics. Its work was no secret to anyone in the area. The Cascade-Siskiyou area is the northeast corner of the Klamath Knot. To geologists, a knot is a place where geological formations of different ages come together and overlap. The Klamath Knot is the meeting place of the ancient Klamath and Siskiyou mountains and the younger Cascade and Coast mountain ranges. This jumble of rocks creates the most diverse plant habitat in the American West. Habitats not normally near one another, including oak savannah, douglas fir, white pine and juniper, are just around the corner in the Klamath Knot. Some 70,000 acres around Soda Mountain are among the most biologically diverse in the entire Klamath Knot. Only 52,951 acres was designated as a national monument. The highest and best use of the Soda Mountain area is as a laboratory for plant and wildlife observation and for ecosystem protection and rehabilitation experiments that can be tested for use in other damaged environments. It is unlikely to draw summer crowds like Crater Lake or Yosemite. But it is likely to attract organized tours, research groups and specialized tourist groups such as Elderhostel, whose members are interested in something more substantive than shopping and seeing the sights. The Jackson County commissioners complain the decision to designate the monument was already made before they were consulted. The commissioners are guilty of backing the wrong horse. Historically, they backed a handful of people who bought property in the area to perpetuate the illusion they still lived in the Wild, Wild West. Now the commissioners have engaged former Congressman Bob Smith to oil his way around Washington and protect the interests of a handful of landowners who fear new management policies for the area will destroy their Wild West illusions. The Bush BLM and BIA are not the first philistines to want to quarry the Columbia Gorge. When navigation interests wanted to build the South Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia River in 1896, they planned to quarry Beacon Rock. It is a spectacular haystack-shaped lava plug on the Washington side of the Columbia River just below what is now Bonneville Dam. Lewis and Clark named Beacon Rock in their journals. It was a waypoint on the Oregon Trail until Sam Barlow built his road from The Dalles to Oregon City over the south slopes of Mount Hood. When the Washington Legislature in Olympia learned the Portland landowner might sell Beacon Rock to the state of Oregon for a state park to prevent quarrying, Washington lawmakers promptly made Beacon Rock a Washington state park. Because the best quarrying sites are adjacent to freeways and transcontinental rail routes, the BLM and the BIA expect bids from the nation's largest aggregate suppliers. Scars from more recent quarrying in the gorge have healed with time and restoration efforts. New quarries in the gorge will become running sores damaging the tourism industry on which both the tribes and the gorge communities now depend. It's the equivalent of siting a dump beside Old Faithful or a landfill at the base of Mount Rushmore. An effort to make the gorge a major national supplier of basalt aggregate flies in the face of decades of local, state and federal efforts to preserve the considerable scenic value left in the gorge as a tourism asset. The Columbia Gorge is a remarkable place. It has absorbed much environmental abuse. Despite the railroads and highways on both banks, dams and power lines, canneries, industrial plants, sawmills, resorts, subdivisions and native fishing sites, all outside the established cities, the gorge is still a spectacular sight from the highway overlooks or from the decks of the growing fleet of small cruise ships that now sail through the gorge between Astoria and Lewiston, Idaho. But there is a limit to the abuse the gorge can absorb and still remain a world-class attraction. There is no evidence the nation is so strapped for crushed rock that the federal government must sacrifice major tourism assets in the Northwest. There are still people who remember when the Northwest was an economic backwater and a "plundered province" for the benefit of Eastern industrialists. Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., should warn the Bush administration the Northwest is unwilling to become a national sacrifice area so Bush can plunder public land to pay back the folks who bought his way to the White House. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager