Pubdate: Wed, 19 Mar 2003 Source: Daily Review, The (CA) Copyright: 2003 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.dailyreviewonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410 Author: Donna Horowitz, Staff Writer COUNTY OKS MEDICAL MARIJUANA IDS Card Doesn't Necessarily Protect Patients, Caregivers From Arrest After hearing from more than a dozen speakers -- some in wheelchairs and others with canes -- the Alameda County Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 Tuesday to support issuing medical marijuana identification cards. Supervisor Scott Haggerty cast the lone dissenting vote, saying the cards only had symbolic value because most county police chiefs and the sheriff said they would not honor them. Haggerty said he feared the county would be giving medical marijuana card-holders false hope. "When you walk out of here, you will have nothing more than when you walked in," Haggerty told about 40 medical marijuana supporters toward the end of the debate. Those supporters applauded after the proposal by Supervisor Nate Miley was voted upon. It will require a second reading before it's adopted. After the meeting, Angel McClary Raich, a leading proponent of medical marijuana use, said although the card doesn't necessarily protect patients and their caregivers from arrest, she said, "It reinforces state law." She was referring to Prop. 215 -- passed by California voters in 1996 -- which allows the possession, cultivation and use of medicinal marijuana. Furthermore, she said the card, "legitimizes the patient and care giver." McClary Raich, a 37-year-old Oakland resident who uses eight pounds of marijuana a year to treat her many illnesses, including a brain tumor and seizures, said if police arrest a legitimate medical marijuana user, they can be forced to pay triple damages. That happened in the case of a Berkeley resident who won $30,000 in damages in 2001 after suing for false arrest, she said. William Drury, 45, of Castro Valley was among the many speakers who testified about the drug's health benefits. Since undergoing removal of a kidney after discovering he had cancer in 1999, he has suffered severe intestinal problems with flu-like symptoms. Use of medical marijuana has relieved most of the pain, he said, allowing him to attend Chabot Community College, where he has earned straight A's. Stacy Fernandez, 53, of Hayward said her weight had dropped to 76 pounds due to an auto immune disease, and she was frequently hospitalized for dehydration until she started using medical marijuana. Now, she said, she weighs 120 pounds and no longer needs a care giver. "My card has been so wonderful," she said, referring to a card issued by the city of Oakland. "I've been able to use my card and feel like a whole person." Miley doesn't see opposition by many of the county's police departments to the identification card as being insurmountable, noting a similar ordinance met resistance from the Oakland Police Department when it was introduced. "Now Oakland is finally on board," Miley said. All it takes is for police officers to be educated about the cards and for their city councils to direct them to honor them, he said. At this time the ordinance only would be applicable to the unincorporated areas, although Miley eventually wants the county as a whole to abide by it. "We'll fight that another day," he said. The ordinance, which took more than a year to make it out of committee, does not specify how much is permissible for a medical marijuana user or care giver to grow or possess. Board President Gail Steele has been bothered by the potential for abuse by a caregiver. But she supported the ordinance after being reassured the card wouldn't protect a caregiver supplying marijuana to a whole neighborhood. Joe DeVries, field director for Miley, said the next step would be to develop growing standards, something he estimated may take a couple of years. Haggerty said medical marijuana regulations need to be developed by the state rather than each county or city, noting that he agreed to push for that if one of the speakers he talked to after the meeting followed through and worked with him. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth