Pubdate: Tue, 14 Oct 2003 Source: North County Times (CA) Contact: 2003 North County Times Website: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: Jennifer Coleman, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) DAVIS SIGNS MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL, VETOES NEEDLE BILL SACRAMENTO (AP) -- Gov. Gray Davis has signed a bill that will create a card for medical marijuana users to help protect them from arrest, but he vetoed another that would have let pharmacists sell up to 30 hypodermic needles without a prescription. Davis' deadline to sign or veto legislation was Sunday, by which time he had signed a total of 909 bills this year and vetoed 58. Last year, the Legislature send Davis 1,433 bills, of which he vetoed 263. The rush of bill signings and vetoes capped a year that saw Davis, a Democrat, approve new laws that let undocumented immigrants get driver's licenses, expand rights for domestic partners and mandate many businesses to provide health insurance for their workers. Opponents of those three hotly debated new laws have filed papers to put referendums on the ballot to let voters determine whether the state should implement the laws. Gov.-elect Arnold Schwarzenegger "will take a close look at new laws that Gov. Davis signed in recent weeks," said Karen Hanretty, spokeswoman for Schwarzenegger. Last week, Schwarzenegger asked Davis to refrain from making any more appointments and from signing the hundreds of bills left on the governor's desk, though bills not signed or vetoed by the governor by the deadline automatically become law. Schwarzenegger didn't specify which bills he didn't want to see become law. If Schwarzenegger objects to any of the newly enacted laws, he'll ask the Legislature to change them, Hanretty said, or he'll take it to the people by way of a referendum. Since he was recalled in last Tuesday's special election, Davis' final wave of bill signings and vetoes was the source of much speculation whether he would approve a final wave of liberal legislation before Republican Schwarzenegger takes office in November. Among the bills signed just before the Sunday deadline was one by Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-Santa Clara, that directs the Department of Health Services to provide medical marijuana users with a card that protects them from arrest. The identification cards are designed to protect medical marijuana users from arrest by state and local law enforcement officers. Proposition 215, approved by California voters in 1996, allows Californians with cancer, HIV and certain other chronic medical conditions to grow and use marijuana to ease nausea and other health problems, if a physician recommends it. Cultivation, possession and use of marijuana remains a crime under federal law. Davis vetoed another Vasconcellos bill, which aimed to reduce the number of AIDS cases by letting adults buy up to 30 hypodermic needles at a time without a doctor's prescription. Supporters of the bill say it would have reduced the sharing of needles by drug addicts, which would slow the spread of AIDS and other blood borne diseases. In his veto message, Davis said the bill would have undermined one-for-one needle exchange programs already in place, and would weaken county oversight of such programs. Davis also vetoed a bill that would have allowed undocumented immigrants to apply for tuition waivers at California community colleges. That bill, by Sen. Martha Escutia, D-Norwalk, would have required that the student attended high school in California for at least three years, obtained a diploma or an equivalent degree and, if the student isn't in the state legally, had applied to become a legal resident. Opponents said the bill followed in the footsteps of the bill Davis signed in September that allows illegal immigrants to get driver's licenses. Supporters said the bill would help those students become educated members of the state's work force, helping the economy. Davis said a bill he signed in 2001, which eliminated the higher out-of-state tuition rate for some immigrant students, provided those students with the opportunity to attend college in California. Escutia's bill, he said, would "result in significant additional costs to the state" because of the lost tuition. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk