Pubdate: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 Source: Newport Daily News, The (RI) Copyright: 2005. The Newport Daily News. Contact: http://www.newportdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1808 CANNABIS BILL MUST ANSWER KEY CONCERNS Legalizing medical marijuana has come up in the Rhode Island General Assembly before, but legislators this year seem more willing to give it a try. Before they just say yes, however, we think they should devote more brain cells to some issues and unanswered questions. Cannabis' benefits for people with certain illnesses are well-established. The identical medical-marijuana bills in the state House and Senate cite a 1999 study by the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine, saying that the herb has beneficial uses in treating pain, nausea and other symptoms of certain medical conditions. The Senate Judiciary Committee last week heard testimony in favor of the bill from nine people, including medical patients, a physician and the former chairman of Brown University's psychology and neuroscience department. The proposed legislation would allow people with specific medical conditions, including AIDS, cancer, glaucoma, hepatitis C and multiple sclerosis, to acquire and cultivate up to 12 plants or 2.5 ounces of marijuana, and possess paraphernalia for smoking it. Marijuana is forbidden by federal law, although 10 states allow its medicinal use. But the bill points out that, according to the U.S. Sentencing Commission and the FBI, 99 out of 100 marijuana arrests are made under state law. "Consequently," the bill says, "changing state law will have the practical effect of protecting from arrest the vast majority of seriously ill people who have a medical need to use marijuana." This is all good so far. But we have some concerns that have not been addressed in the debate. Marijuana does have harmful side effects among frequent users. The popular image of the burned-out pothead is no mistake: The drug clouds short-term memory, dulls mental alertness and stifles motivation. To someone suffering from a debilitating disease, such effects are a negligible price to pay for relief from symptoms. But it would be bad public policy to send the message that pot is harmless and can be good for you. It would be all too easy for young, healthy people to justify smoking it because "even doctors say it's OK." Legalization of medical marijuana should therefore be accompanied by an educational campaign that explains the drug's limited therapeutic uses and discourages recreational smoking. Unfortunately, publicity costs money, and we'd rather not see this measure become an expense for the state. Perhaps legislators can come up with a way to fund an information campaign without using taxpayers' money. The bills' sponsors seem to have spaced out on another important issue: How and where will patients get their pot? How can you take a controlled substance and decontrol it for some people, but not give them a way to legally buy it? Obviously, we don't want sick people patronizing illegal drug dealers, as some undoubtedly do now. Yet not every patient will have the ability to securely grow cannabis plants or find an authorized caregiver who can. The idea of "designated growers" also creates the danger of pot pushers getting a "primary caregiver" designation from a qualifying patient to avoid prosecution for their illegal activities. The law will have to make clear what sources of marijuana will be legal. This is no simple question. Courts in California have declared marijuana growers' and buyers' "clubs" illegal, and medical-marijuana advocates there frequently have been at odds with law enforcement. Canada currently allows a small number of patients to buy Health Canada marijuana that is sent directly to them or their doctors; British Columbia soon will have a pilot program, modeled on a Dutch program, that would allow medical users to buy marijuana at participating pharmacies. No such system is in place in this country, and Rhode Island likely will face the same difficulties as other states that legalized before they rationalized. We hope General Assembly members will show compassion for those who would be helped by medical cannabis, and approve legislation that will allow it. However, more debate and legislative work is needed to avoid opening the door to new abuses of a substance that, for most of us, will remain illegal. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)