Pubdate: Sat, 14 Jun 2003 Source: Asbury Park Press (NJ) Copyright: 2003 Asbury Park Press Contact: http://www.app.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/26 Author: Joseph Picard, Toms River Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) FIGHT FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA GOES ON DOVER TOWNSHIP -- Cheryl Miller lost her battle with multiple sclerosis last Saturday, but her fight to legalize marijuana for medical purposes will be continued by her husband, Jim. Cheryl Miller, from the Silverton section, died June 7 at age 56. She had suffered from MS -- a debilitating disease that attacks the central nervous system -- for more than 32 years. She found that marijuana eased her pain, but often went without the substance because it is illegal in New Jersey and has not been approved for medical use, except in a handful of states and in Canada. Jim Miller, a carpenter, has been on a 10-year crusade to bring about the legal use of medical marijuana in New Jersey, to provide some relief for his long-suffering wife and others in similar situations. He has written more than 100 letters to legislators, protested nine times near the White House, and once pushed his wife in a wheelchair from Seaside Heights to Trenton, drawing media attention to her plight. "If she had been allowed to use marijuana, she definitely would have suffered less, and she may have lived longer," Miller said by telephone from Oklahoma, where he had returned this week with his wife's cremated remains to inter them in her native state. He said he would continue to campaign for the medical use of marijuana on the state and federal levels. The Millers, invoking a state law passed in 1981, pressed the state to ask Washington for permission to do medical marijuana studies involving doctors and their patients. The state Department of Health and Human Services, in a letter dated Nov. 5, 2002, denied the Millers' request, stating there are viable treatment alternatives to marijuana. Miller said he will try again, and has already sent a letter to state Sen. Andrew Ciesla, R-Ocean, asking him to renew the request to Washington. Ciesla could not be reached for comment yesterday. Miller also supports legislation now in the House of Representatives to allow states to decide for themselves on the legality of marijuana. Rep. Robert Andrews, D-N.J., whose constituency includes Burlington, Gloucester and Camden counties, changed his stance from opposing medical marijuana to supporting it after meeting Cheryl Miller about three years ago. "After meeting Cheryl, I asked myself why should a government get between a patient and her doctor?" Andrews said. "I have faith in physicians. If her doctor was willing to prescribe marijuana for her, the government should not second-guess." Andrews said there is little hope that the current legalization proposal will pass, but that the effort to get patients the marijuana they need would, eventually, succeed. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom