Pubdate: Fri, 28 Feb 2003 Source: The Star Democrat (MD) Copyright: 2003 The Star Democrat Contact: http://www.stardem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1233 Author: John Biemer, Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) BILL WOULD DECRIMINALIZE MEDICAL MARIJUANA ANNAPOLIS (AP) - To help get through eight months of chemotherapy for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Lawrence Silberman turned to pot. Because the 51-year-old Burtonsville contractor had a teenage daughter, he smoked the marijuana in a basement bathroom, exhaling into a fan. The few daily puffs would help him fall asleep despite chemotherapy drugs which he said made him feel "wired, as if I'd been on an espresso binge." The pot also helped him eat, despite the illness. "If I wasn't able to sleep or eat, I'd be dead," Silberman testified Wednesday before the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. "So the marijuana did help save my life." Silberman, whose cancer is in remission, was among those speaking in support of a bill that would remove the threat of imprisonment for medical marijuana patients. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Paula Hollinger, D-Baltimore County, would set up a mechanism whereby patients, with approval of their doctors, could obtain cards from the state Board of Physician Quality Assurance certifying that they are using marijuana for health reasons. Under the bill, patients suffering from a debilitating medical condition such as cancer, HIV or AIDS, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma or Crohn's disease could pay a registration fee of up to $150 to smoke pot and help ease the symptoms. Supporters believe compounds in marijuana smoke often relieve severe nausea suffered by some patients undergoing treatment for cancer - and having trouble keeping down pills. "For many people, marijuana is the only medicine with a suitable degree of safety or efficacy," Hollinger said. The patient would be allowed to grow seven marijuana plants, three of which may be mature, and possess one usable ounce of marijuana per mature plant. Since 1970, marijuana has been a controlled dangerous substance under state and federal drug prohibitions. Simple possession or use of marijuana can bring penalties of up to a year in prison or a $1,000 fine. Despite strong opposition from the Bush administration, there is a national movement on the state level to decriminalize marijuana for medical use, and eight states have laws that protect patients who possess and grow their own pot with their doctors' approval. The Board of Physician Quality Assurance, which is a part of the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, is opposing the bill, in part because it may conflict with federal law. "If this measure passes in Maryland, the state must assume some liability for setting up an illegal framework that encourages individuals and the state to violate federal laws," said Carolyn W. Burns, the vice president of Drug-Free Kids: America's Challenge. Sen. Nancy Jacobs, R-Harford, raised the question Wednesday of how patients will be able get the marijuana plants without breaking the law. "People are going to be going out and committing a crime," she said. "You've got to figure out where to get the plants or where to get the seeds. It's got to be in this bill." A co-sponsor of the bill, Sen. David Brinkley, R-Frederick, downplayed the concern of where the plants are obtained as secondary to helping people with severe diseases. "The fact is, they're already doing it," he said. "Your people are doing this now." Brinkley was treated for Hodgkin's lymphoma in 1989, but did not use marijuana. Last year, a bill in Maryland to drastically reduce penalties for possession of marijuana by those using it as medicine passed the House of Delegates but was killed in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee, under a more conservative chairman who lost his re-election bid. Hollinger has 19 bipartisan co-sponsors on the bill, so it already has almost enough votes to pass the 47-member Senate. An identical measure has 56 co-sponsors in the House. "The administration has not taken a position on this particular bill, but Gov. (Robert) Ehrlich supports the concept of legalizing medical marijuana," said his spokeswoman, Shareese DeLeaver. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk