Pubdate: Wed, 13 Oct 2004 Source: News-Review, The (Roseburg, OR) Copyright: 2004 The News-Review Contact: http://www.newsreview.info Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2623 Author: Christian Bringhurst Cited: Measure 33 http://www.Yeson33.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Measure+33 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) CLEARING THE SMOKE Medical Marijuana Issue: Debate Grows Over Issue of Patient Supply Versus Drive to Legalize the Drug Measure 33 supporters argue that the initiative is necessary to provide the state's medical marijuana patients with an adequate supply of the drug to treat their ailments. Law enforcement groups and others opposed to the measure argue that medicine has nothing to do with it, that the law is only the next step in the drive to legalize marijuana in Oregon. "Many of the most visible advocates for Oregon's medical marijuana program were extensively involved in the legalization movement years before the medical marijuana concept was hatched," says Douglas County Sheriff Chris Brown. "The first thing people need to recognize is that this is not a medical issue." Riddle resident John Sajo, chief petitioner and main author of the measure, makes no secret of his past involvement in the drive to legalize marijuana. However, medical marijuana is a different matter, he says. "This is really an issue of getting high quality medicine to patients rather than forcing them" to grow their own, Sajo says. "Are we doing this because it's legalization in disguise? No." However, he adds, "I hope we get a chance to revisit the legalization" issue in the future. Sajo said the authors of the 1998 medical marijuana measure did not address the issue of how patients would get their medical marijuana because it was seen as too politically risky at the time. He believes the current law enjoys widespread public support, so the time is right to provide a means for patients to get their medical marijuana when they need it. Law enforcement officials are not the only ones up in arms over the proposed revision to the law. Stormy Ray, a medical marijuana user and chief petitioner for the 1998 measure who now runs a foundation in Salem, also opposes Measure 33. "Today's illegal black market would become tomorrow's dispensaries," Ray writes in her Argument in Opposition published in the state voters guide. "How dare Measure 33 put personal agendas ahead of the welfare of Oregon's patients (and) endanger our program." Indeed, some fear that the federal government would clamp down on medical marijuana laws in Oregon, California and other states if measures such as this were to pass. Sajo puts little stock in such talk, however, citing a favorable ruling recently from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals over a Justice Department challenge to California's medical marijuana law. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in the case during its current term. "We anticipate a legal conflict with the federal government similar to what we've had with the death with dignity (Oregon's assisted suicide) law and similar to what we've had in other areas," Sajo says. "We are confident, however, that the initiative will hold up ... we don't expect any rights that patients have won to be taken away." California's network of medical marijuana dispensaries is a good example of how such a system could work in Oregon, Sajo says. The difference would be that Oregon's dispensaries would be state regulated, whereas dispensaries in California are monitored at the local level. Brown and other critics have a different perspective -- they see it as legalized drug trafficking. "What mental picture do you have when you read 'state dispensaries?'" Brown asks. "The fact is, anyone can be a dispensary ... dispensaries will pop up in residential neighborhoods all across the state; beside schools, beside churches, beside you." Brown worries that marijuana will proliferate in Douglas County, which already has the second-highest number of medical marijuana cardholders in the state, trailing only populous Multnomah County. "Marijuana use among (people) ages 18 to 25 rose 30 percent in Oregon from 1999 to 2001," Brown says. "Nationally, the increase was 3 percent." Attacking the practice of using marijuana for pain management, Brown says this legitimization of the drug has caused it to surge again in popularity among teens and young adults. Meanwhile, a law that purportedly represented the needs of the terminally ill and severely disabled has provided cover for thousands of marijuana users complaining of ailments far less debilitating, Brown says. "Originally, the advocates suggested that this was largely an end-of-life option. In other words, people who were terminally ill could benefit from smoking marijuana because the harmful consequences were irrelevant and it may ease their pain," Brown says. "Of the roughly 11,000 cards issued as of July 1, 2004, 8,711 were issued to people reporting 'pain.' Only a fraction have been issued to people with any sort of condition that could be construed as end-of-life." One medical marijuana user and primary caregiver who takes issue with positions such as Brown's is South County resident Don Coon, who defends the law and its medical efficacy. "Whether it's a bad foot or a broken shoulder, who are we to question somebody who's in pain?" asks Coon, who uses marijuana to treat chronic back pain and arthritis. Coon found marijuana to be a much more palatable way to manage his pain than the cocktail of narcotics once prescribed to him by his physician. So have his wife and children. "When he was on pain pills he was a couch potato ... and when he came down off the medication he was irritable and grouchy," says his wife, who asked not to be identified. "My kids vowed that they would leave home if he ever went back on pills." Coon said his liver failed twice from all of the prescription drugs he was taking. A self-professed "green thumb," Coon says few people know how to grow marijuana as fruitfully as he has learned to do. Then, when their crop fails to produce as much marijuana as they need to get through the year, they are forced to go without. "My body is shutting down, and I don't know how many years I can keep the pace helping people up because I can't even help myself anymore," Coon says. "I need to have a place where I can go get my medicine." Over the years he has been growing marijuana, Coon estimates he has helped treat the pain of hundreds of people like himself. "I'm not standing before you talking about legalization - but then again, where would the problem be?" Coon asks. "It is a natural, organic herb." [sidebar] HOW THE LAW WOULD CHANGE The main changes in medical marijuana laws that would take place if Measure 33 passes include: State-regulated dispensaries could sell the drug. To run a dispensary, an adult must pay $1,000 and submit a petition of at least 25 medical marijuana cardholders who support the creation of the dispensary. The dispensary will operate as a nonprofit entity. A dispensary cannot distribute more than 6 pounds of the drug to any one patient per year. Confidential records would be kept of each cardholder's purchases to ensure he or she doesn't visit more than one dispensary to get more marijuana than allowed by law. Dispensaries must provide free medical marijuana to indigent patients equal to at least 20 percent of the dispensary's gross monthly revenue. If no private dispensaries are operating in a county within six months of the measure's passage, the county itself would be required to act as a dispensary. Medical marijuana providers could sell the drug at a price agreed upon by buyer and seller. Providers could serve up to 10 patients without registering as a dispensary. The amount of marijuana a registered cardholder may possess would increase from 3 ounces of harvested marijuana, three mature plants and four immature plants, to 1 pound of harvested marijuana and 10 plants. Cardholders who can prove they derive their entire year's supply from one outdoor harvest could possess up to 6 pounds of harvested marijuana right after the harvest. The status of being a medical marijuana patient shall not, in and of itself, constitute cause for dismissal or denial of employment. Nurse practitioners and naturopaths would be allowed to prescribe medical marijuana in addition to the physicians and osteopaths already authorized to do so. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake