Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jun 2005
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2005 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Katie Zezima
Cited: White House Office of Drug Control Policy 
http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/
Cited: Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

IN RHODE ISLAND, UNCERTAINTY ABOUT MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW

Boston -- Hearing that the Rhode Island legislature approved the use 
of medical marijuana Tuesday night, Rhonda O'Donnell sat in her 
Warwick, R.I., living room and giddily thought about legally sauteing 
the drug in some butter and putting it into a cake mix.

Ms. O'Donnell, 42, who has multiple sclerosis, hopes ingesting 
marijuana will ease the stiffness and numbness in her legs that leave 
her unable to work or move without pain.

"It's not going to cure me, and it's not going to let me walk 
normally, but hopefully it can make me a little less uncomfortable 
and allow me to relax a little more and enjoy life a little more," 
Ms. O'Donnell, whose disease was diagnosed in 1994, said in a 
telephone interview.

But whether she can legally consume marijuana is uncertain. Gov. 
Donald L. Carcieri vetoed the bill Wednesday evening, saying it would 
encourage marijuana use, sanction criminal activity and make the drug 
more available to children.

Additionally, Mr. Carcieri said, it would lull residents into 
believing they could not be prosecuted for marijuana use, which 
remains a federal offense. The bill also does not have strong safety 
precautions, he said, and would allow patients to grow large amounts 
of marijuana with no guidelines for its disposal.

"This bill's noble goals cannot mask its serious safety flaws," Mr. 
Carcieri, a Republican, wrote. "This bill will increase the 
availability of marijuana on the streets of our state."

It appears that proponents of the bill have the necessary 
three-fifths vote in each chamber of the legislature, both heavily 
Democratic, to override the veto. The bill passed the Senate 33 to 1 
on Tuesday and was approved 52 to 10 last week in the House.

If the veto is overridden, Rhode Island will become the 11th state to 
allow medical marijuana, and the first to do so after the Supreme 
Court ruled this month that federal authorities could prosecute those 
who use the drug for medicinal use, even in states allowing it.

Mr. Carcieri's chief of policy and a group of legislators met on 
Tuesday with two officials in the White House Office of Drug Control 
Policy, an agency spokeswoman, Jennifer DeVallance, said. The agency 
presented state officials data showing that the drug was highly 
abused and had not been shown to be medicinally effective, Ms. DeVallance said.

"Obviously, this is not something that the federal government 
supports because the F.D.A. has not deemed that smoked marijuana is 
an appropriate medication for the variety of illnesses people claim 
it should be used for," she said.

The bill would allow those with medical conditions including AIDS, 
cancer and glaucoma to receive what amounts to a signed prescription 
for marijuana from their primary care physician. The doctor, patient 
and person providing care would be entered into a registry kept by 
the state's Department of Public Health, which has 90 days to 
promulgate regulations.

The patient and attendant, who must be Rhode Island residents, would 
receive identification cards allowing them to cultivate up to 12 
marijuana plants indoors or possess up to 2.5 ounces of the drug.

The patient, attendant, doctor and anyone present while the patient 
was ingesting marijuana would be exempt from prosecution. Landlords, 
schools and employers would be barred from refusing someone because 
they were enrolled in the medical marijuana program.

The Department of Health will issue a report on the program to the 
legislature by Jan. 1, 2007; if the legislature does not take action 
the bill will expire on June 30, 2007, and all marijuana will again be illegal.

The Rhode Island bill does not address how patients would obtain the 
drug. Its chief sponsor, State Senator Rhoda E. Perry, said patients 
would "get it illegally, just like they do in the 10 other states."

This worries law enforcement officials, who say the law will be 
difficult to enforce and that marijuana could easily find its way 
into the hands of those the bill is not intended to serve.

"We may very well see counterfeit registration cards, and then it 
becomes a quandary to figure out who legally possesses it with a card 
and which cards are false," said Maj. Joseph R. Miech of the Rhode 
Island State Police.

But Ms. Perry and Representative Thomas C. Slater, who sponsored a 
similar bill in the House, say the legislation is a way to help ease 
the suffering of the sick and dying and is well-supported by 
residents. A poll taken last March by the Marijuana Policy Project, a 
national nonprofit organization that promotes the legalization of 
marijuana, found that 69 percent of state residents supported a bill 
allowing the chronically ill to grow marijuana for medicinal use.

The issue has been a personal crusade for both Ms. Perry, whose 
nephew died of AIDS and refused to smoke marijuana for fear of 
arrest, and Mr. Slater, who has inoperable lung cancer and has seen 
three of his five siblings and his father suffer from cancer.

"It's an issue of compassion," Mr. Slater said. "It's an issue for 
those who are sick and dying and suffering and need that last-minute 
peace of mind." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake