Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Forum: http://discussion.canada.com/user/forums.asp Author: Petti Fong CANADA'S REBAGLIATI GETS WAIVER FOR GAMES Gold medallist who admitted drug use given 4-month pass to travel to U.S. Canada's gold medal snowboarder Ross Rebagliati, denied access to the U.S. for his positive marijuana test, is going to Salt Lake City after all. Mr. Rebagliati was given a four-month waiver to enter the U.S. after he went to a border crossing in Surrey, B.C., yesterday morning with his lawyer. Mr. Rebagliati, who has regularly travelled to the U.S. since the 1998 marijuana test, needed the waiver -- complete with a doctor's note guaranteeing that he has been drug-free for the past 30 days -- in order to cross the border. Yesterday Mr. Rebagliati said was going to the opening ceremony. "I've been told I'll be sitting next to Wayne Gretzky. It's a huge thing for me. Just a couple of days ago I didn't think I'd get the chance to go at all." Mr. Rebagliati, who won the gold medal when snowboarding debuted as an Olympic event at Nagano, Japan, in 1998, had his medal taken away after a drug test detected a trace amount of cannabis. It was restored after Mr. Rebagliati convinced the Olympic committee the marijuana was in his system because of second-hand smoke at a party he attended. Two weeks ago, Mr. Rebagliati was turned away by U.S. Customs at Vancouver International Airport after a customs officer found his name flagged in the customs computer system because of his prior admission that he had used marijuana. "When I went through this morning with the lawyer, I didn't have any problems," Mr. Rebagliati said in a phone interview from Seattle before his flight to Salt Lake City. "We explained what happened and the customs officer gave me a four-month waiver to come and go." Roots Canada, his former corporate sponsor, paid for his airplane ticket and provided him with tickets for the opening ceremony, he said. Roots western sales and marketing manager Rich Patterson said the company wanted to send Mr. Rebagliati to the Olympics. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh