Pubdate: Fri, 14 May 2004
Source: Caledonian-Record, The  (VT)
Copyright: 2004 The Caledonian-Record
Contact: 
http://www.caledonianrecord.com/pages/letters_to_editor/submit_letter_to_editor.php
Website: http://www.caledonianrecord.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1355
Author: James Jardine, Special To The Caledonian-Record
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

HOUSE: VERY SICK CAN USE MARIJUANA

MONTPELIER, VT - The House of Representatives spent four hours
Thursday debating proposals to allow patients suffering from chronic
pain to smoke marijuana to alleviate their pain.

The debate followed a vote late Wednesday in the Senate to allow
certain seriously ill patients to possess limited amounts of
marijuana. After the Senate amended a House bill by adding a medical
marijuana section, the bill returned to the House for a vote.

The House debate was emotional and divisive. Supporters of the
proposal to allow patients to possess marijuana said they believed
allowing patients in intractable pain to smoke marijuana to relieve
the pain was a kind and compassionate act that would be limited to a
small number of people each year. Opponents said the bill would
violate federal law, which makes the possession and use of marijuana,
a Class A regulated drug, illegal. They said approving legislation
that violates federal law violates the oath of office legislators took
when they were sworn in.

The final vote of the day approved a House bill dealing with medical
care directives amended by a House Health and Welfare Committee
marijuana proposal by a vote of 79-48 with 23 members not voting. The
vote meant the proposal was approved on its second reading and was
advanced for a third and final vote today.

The proposal approved by the House requires a patient to have an
established doctor-patient relationship for six months prior to a
patient's application to possess and use marijuana. To be eligible, a
patient must be receiving end-of-life care for cancer or AIDS or other
specific conditions with intractable symptoms and no success with
other treatments.

Patients may possess a limit of one mature plant, two immature plants
and two ounces of usable marijuana. A patient must complete an
application with the Department of Public Safety. The department will
review the application and conduct a criminal records check. The
applicant must pay a $100 application fee.

Northeast Kingdom representatives voting in favor of the House Health
and Welfare proposal include Donald Bostic, R-St. Johnsbury, David
Brown, R-Walden, John Rodgers, D-Glover, and Bobby Starr, D-Troy.
Kingdom representatives who voted against the proposal were David
Bolduc, R-Orleans, David Clark, R-St. Johnsbury, John Hall, R-Newport,
Cola Hudson, R-Lyndon, Bill Johnson, R-Canaan, Duncan Kilmartin,
R-Newport, Leigh Larocque, R-Barnet, Janice Peaslee, R-Guildhall,
Loren Shaw, R-Derby, and Nancy Sheltra, R-Derby. Steve Larrabee,
R-Danville, was absent for the vote.

The passage of the House version of a marijuana bill followed votes on
two earlier proposals. Rep. David Zuckerman, P-Burlington, introduced
an amendment that was more liberal in its scope than the Health and
Welfare version. It was defeated by a vote of 49 in favor and 87
against. Rep. Bobby Starr, D-Troy, was the only Kingdom representative
to vote in favor of the Zuckerman proposal. On the next vote, the
House voted to substitute the Health and Welfare amendment in place of
the Senate amendment by a vote of 113-21.

Today, the House of Representatives will vote on the bill on its third
and final reading. If it is approved, which is likely, the bill must
return to the Senate for a vote. The Senate must vote on whether to
approve the House action, which substitutes a House amendment for an
amendment approved by the Senate Wednesday night.

Wednesday night the full Senate took up a bill titled "Directives for
Health Care." The bill, H.752, is a House bill that outlines new
guidelines and rules for persons who wish to create advanced
directives for their health care should they become seriously ill.
After the full House passed the bill, it went to the Senate for a vote.

While in the Senate, the Senate amended the House advanced directives
bill by tacking on a Senate medical marijuana proposal. The Senate
then approved the marijuana amendment and subsequently approved the
underlying bill and its amendment and returned the amended House bill
to the House for a new vote.

The Senate action Wednesday night set up the four-hour House debate
and votes on Thursday.

Sen. Bernier Mayo, R-Caledonia, was one of 17 senators who sponsored
the medical marijuana amendment. The proposal to amend the advanced
directives bill passed by a vote of 22-6. The amended bill was then
approved by the Senate on a voice vote.

Locally, Sens. Mayo and James Greenwood, R-Essex-Orleans, voted to
approve the marijuana amendment, while Sens. Vincent Illuzzi,
R-Essex-Orleans, and Julius Canns, R-Caledonia, opposed adding the
marijuana amendment.