Pubdate: Fri, Apr, 08 Apr 2005
Source: Crimson White, The (Edu, Univ of Alabama)
Copyright: 2005 The Crimson White.
Contact:  http://www.cw.ua.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2451
Author: Sarah Kate Sullivan
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

BILL WOULD ALLOW MEDICAL MARIJUANA IN ALABAMA

On college campuses, many stereotype those who sport jam band T-shirts, 
wear hemp jewelry and listen to "String Cheese, man," as the typical 
college-age marijuana user.

But what defines the image of a user after he or she grows out of the 
"experimental phase?"

One thing is certain: Laura Campbell hardly fits the bill of a grown-up 
hippie. To the mother of three, smoking the drug is not part of any 
recreational lifestyle.

Instead, using marijuana is a necessity. She smokes it to make her chronic 
pain more bearable so she can be a better mother, she told The Huntsville 
Times last week.

Campbell, who said she is allergic to prescription painkillers like Demerol 
and morphine, accompanied state Rep. Laura Hall, D-Huntsville, as she 
introduced a bill that would allow for the medicinal use of marijuana in 
Alabama.

Hall could not be reached for comment this week. In Alabama, possession of 
less than two pounds of marijuana is a misdemeanor that entails a sentence 
of up to a year in prison and a maximum $2,000 fine.

But Hall's bill would exclude those who smoke the drug for medicinal 
purposes from these charges. Those who need medical marijuana would 
register with the Alabama Department of Public Health and be given the 
right to hold small amounts of the drug without the risk of a criminal 
penalty. Medical marijuana laws are already on the books in eleven states. 
Arizona allows marijuana prescriptions but does not have an active program. 
Hall and Campbell may have their work cut out for them as experts and 
doctors agree that the hot-button issue is unlikely to gain support in the 
Legislature.

"It virtually has no chance," said William Stewart, former chairman of the 
UA political science department. "So little legislation gets through, 
especially a controversial bill. People don't want to see any signal that 
the law is going easy on drug use, even if it is for a noble purpose." 
Stewart said Hall's bill is the first legislation to propose legalizing 
medicinal marijuana in Alabama's history.

Politics aside, the medical community continues to straddle the fence on 
the issue. Anne-Laura Cook, a third-year UA medical school student from 
Tuscaloosa, said she supports marijuana use for treatment in the cases of 
terminally ill patients, but not for chronic pain. She said allergic 
reactions like Campbell's are too rare to argue a strong case for such use 
of the drug. "I hesitate to endorse marijuana as a treatment for chronic 
pain because I know it is a gateway drug to harder drugs," Cook said. "I 
would need to know scientific research that proves marijuana is better than 
current legal therapies."

She said some of her colleagues in the College of Community Health Sciences 
do support medical marijuana use. They have continued to increasingly warm 
up to the idea, she said, because other prescription drugs are often more 
addictive and cause more problems for the patient in the long run.

"It doesn't make sense for marijuana to be illegal if the more severe drugs 
are sold by prescription," she said. "More research has to be done." 
Students at the Capstone are divided on the issue. Their opinions range 
from strong opposition to medical marijuana to full support for legalizing 
the drug altogether.

Students who opposed the bill said their morals and religion influenced 
their decision. All agreed, however, that legalizing marijuana for 
medicinal use would make the drug harder to control. "I think people would 
abuse medical access to marijuana just like Adderall," said Pete Silliman, 
a freshman majoring in economics. "There's no reason to have marijuana if 
you've got, like, morphine and stuff that's better out there."

Anna Chappell, a junior majoring in advertising, wants marijuana to be 
completely legal.

"I don't even smoke, but I think it's a personal decision," she said. 
"Marijuana has proven not to be harmful, while other stuff is much more 
addictive."

Michael Gay, a freshman from Atlanta majoring in management information 
systems, said he opposes the bill because he sees legalizing marijuana in 
any way as opening Pandora's box.

"Once they legalize it for medicine, what's to stop them from legalizing it 
all the way?" he asked. "I have personally seen how marijuana has sent 
friends in the wrong direction. It most certainly is a gateway drug." In 
the future, the issue may pull more weight as government-backed drug 
prevention programs continue to fail, Stewart said.

"At some point, we must ask if we should continue to devote these resources 
to something people are going to do anyway," he said. Stewart likened 
recreational marijuana use to alcohol use during prohibition. He said 
illegal substances are often used more simply because thrill seekers get a 
kick out of defying authority. At the same time, he said firm drinking laws 
probably encourage widespread binge drinking in the United States, which he 
said is hardly a problem in Europe. "As we currently deal with prison 
system overcrowding and other problems, there will likely be a reassessment 
of American drug policy," Stewart said. "More and more prisoners are housed 
for drug offenses. These are not violent criminals, but they are not 
upstanding citizens. "So the question arises, 'Do we want more taxes or do 
we want releases?'"

He said the issue is unique because it is not divided by liberals on one 
side and conservatives on the other. In fact, the founder of the 
conservative movement, William F. Buckley, was the first to raise the issue 
of legalization, he said.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager