Pubdate: Sun, 08 Apr 2001 Source: The Daily Telegram (WI) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Telegram Contact: http://www.superior-wi.com/placed/ Address: 1226 Ogden Ave., Superior, WI 54880 Fax: (715) 394-9404 Author: Andrew Hinkel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) SUPERIOR LAWMAKER PLANS TO CO-AUTHOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL Boyle Wants To Legalize Pot For Medical Purposes MADISON -- Rep. Frank Boyle, D-Superior, will join with fellow Democrat Mark Pocan of Madison to introduce a bill next week to allow Wisconsin doctors to prescribe marijuana. The legislation would be similar to that in the eight other states, which have legalized the drug for pain and appetite disorders. Boyle said that distribution would be tightly controlled and penalties would exist for abusing the law. The US Supreme Court heard arguments, last month in a case, which could determine whether measures legalizing marijuana for medicinal purposes can take effect. Currently, the federal government from actually putting them into practice has blocked the states, which have passed such laws. Boyle said that he believes that those suffering from chronic pain from illnesses like cancer and AIDS have the right to treatment, and that he has known and heard from several people who insist that marijuana has been the only effective treatment for their conditions. "There's a huge medical block of evidence that indicates that medical marijuana is, in some instances, the only resolution to pain associated with chemotherapy, and AIDS patients indicate that it is a tremendous help in stabilizing their digestive system," Boyle said during an interview in his office on Wednesday. "To deny patients the legitimate drug that could help to alleviate the symptoms of a critical disease is unconscionable," he said. Boyle, along with then Rep. Tammy Baldwin, introduced a similar bill in 1997. He said the bill has a better chance of passage this time because the political climate around the issue has changed a great deal in the last few years. Ballot initiatives authorizing medicinal marijuana have passed by large majorities in several states. Boyle said he is also encouraged by the fact that the Republican chairman of the State Affairs Committee, Rick Skindrud of Mount Horeb, has scheduled an informational hearing on medicinal marijuana. The hearing, at which the committee will hear testimony from invited speakers on the issue, including law enforcement personnel and medical experts, will take place in the Capitol on Tuesday at 10 a.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager