Pubdate: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 Source: Medford Mail Tribune (OR) Copyright: 2002 The Mail Tribune Contact: http://www.mailtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/642 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) SUSPICIOUS MINDS Congressional Probe of Oregon's Medical Marijuana Law Smacks of Federal Overreaching We wish we believed the federal government was only doing its job in investigating Oregon's medical marijuana program. But the track record of the Bush administration and congressional Republicans suggests otherwise. Even as the state argued in court last week that the feds had no business trying to derail Oregon's assisted suicide law, word came that investigators were checking into the Medical Marijuana Act, which was approved by Oregon voters in 1998. The act allows adults in the state to grow and use a limited amount of marijuana for treating debilitating medical conditions or for relief of severe pain. A doctor must first verify that the patient needs the relief. It's true that the medical marijuana exemption creates an opportunity for abuse. We're concerned that one doctor signed off on more than 40 percent of the marijuana approvals over a three-year period (although that's no doubt due in part to other doctors' reluctance to participate). If criminal activity is being ignored by the state, the feds should step in. But, while there's no evidence suggesting that's the case, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the idea of medical marijuana does not sit comfortably with those in power in Washington, D.C. And that makes us very suspicious about the motives of this secret investigation. We would not be surprised to find some of the same folks opposed to assisted suicide also pushing for an end to medical marijuana. It just doesn't match their values. Whether or not you agree with assisted suicide or medical marijuana, the issues were decided by the state's voters and it is not the place of the federal government to interfere in those decisions. No one has proven any rampant misuse of either law and, if that were proven, the state of Oregon has its own enforcement abilities. Officials in the Bush administration say they are proponents of states' rights. Their actions on assisted suicide suggest that's the case only when they agree with the state's position. Let's hope they don't follow up on that by overreaching on the medical marijuana issue as well. The Right Approach Southern Oregon University officials deserve praise for scheduling budget cuts that keep students in mind by refusing to eliminate academic programs or raise tuition more than the scheduled 3 percent. A combination of layoffs, unfilled vacancies, fewer class offerings, service reductions and fewer part-time hires will be used to reach the budgetary goals. SOU will cut a total of $3.5 million to $3.7 million. Oregon's budget crisis accounts for $1.5 million to $1.7 million of that total. SOU President Elizabeth Zinser said that administrators hope "the impacts will be seamless or transparent to students." She said that if the cuts go any deeper the university would reach the "tipping over" point. We're sure that the university will not reach that point, given the careful budgeting that is being done at the Ashland campus. Administrators acknowledge that further reductions could lead to elimination of academic programs. Since academic programs are the life blood of any institution of higher learning, the demise of some of them could do nothing but hurt the institution by driving away students, which would have a detrimental impact on state funding. SOU is taking the right approach to what could have a devastating impact on the school. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex