Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 Source: Frederick News Post (MD) Copyright: 2003 Great Southern Printing and Manufacturing Company Contact: http://www.fredericknewspost.com/contact/contactfinalnew.cfm?contact=letters Website: http://www.fredericknewspost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Clifford G. Cumber Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) WELDON SIGNS ON TO MARIJUANA BILL ANNAPOLIS -- Delegate Richard Weldon said Tuesday he will sign on to a bill that will allow the terminally and seriously ill to use marijuana to gain some relief from their symptoms. Like many legislators who support the idea, a cancer sufferer has touched Mr. Weldon's life personally. "I lost an uncle who died of cancer," he said. "You know, this was a 6-foot-3 (inch), 260 pounds of big, vibrant, vital guy, and we watched him wither away to nothing before he died. One of the contributors to his rapid decline in health was that he had no appetite, and he couldn't eat. "This was 15, 20 years ago before we would ever have contemplated the use of a substance like marijuana if it had the benefit of increasing appetite." The use of the drug would at least have allowed his uncle to eat and take in calories to keep his strength up in the hope of finding a timely cure, he said. Delegate Dan Morhaim, a Baltimore Democrat and a doctor, has proposed legislation for a pilot project that would determine if there are medical benefits to using marijuana to increase the appetite for those in the terminal stages of an illness such as cancer, Mr. Weldon said. "There's been speculation Delegate Morhaim's bill will prove conclusively and scientifically that there's a benefit," Mr. Weldon said. Dr. Morhaim is not the only lawmaker to develop medical marijuana legislation. State Sen. David Brinkley, R-Carroll/Frederick, is writing legislation so seriously ill users of marijuana only face a $100 fine if prosecuted for possession, if they can prove they need it for medical use. Fellow Sen. Gloria Hollinger, D-Baltimore, will propose legislation focused on the health benefits of the drug. All three are coordinating their efforts. But GOP support may be hard to find, Mr. Brinkley said. "I'm working on Republicans to try and get some Republican support," he said. Mr. Weldon recognizes that his support for the bill may put him in conflict with other members of his party. "I know there'll be controversy and I understand that and I think there are some members of the Republican party that will want to talk to me about why I've co-sponsored this legislation." Legislation was proposed and rejected on a 6-5 vote in the senate Judicial Proceedings Committee last year, killed by the single vote of Frederick's state Sen. Timothy Ferguson. He lost his seat to Mr. Brinkley in the 2002 election. Now legislators hope there is support to get the bill passed. But Mr. Weldon hedges when asked how he thinks the bill will fare. "I think it has a better chance" than last time, he said. "I wouldn't attempt to predict success or failure of a piece of legislation because there are so many dynamics at work." But it may be how widespread cancer has become that finally provides the push needed to pass the medical marijuana law. "The sad thing is about cancer in particular (is) there are so many horror stories," Mr. Weldon said. "We all have family members or friends or extended family that have been impacted by this horrible disease. So the sad thing is the pool of potential supporters grows as the disease continues to ravage our population E There are some significant minority members who are signing on as sponsors of Delegate Morhaim's bill." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom