Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 Source: Ashland Daily Tidings (OR) Copyright: 2006 Ashland Daily Tidings Contact: http://www.dailytidings.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1165 Author: Robert Plain, Ashland Daily Tidings Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) LEGAL GREEN Robert Kridel Is 53 Years Old, Confined To A Wheelchair And In Constant, Agonizing Pain. Eight years ago he cut off his finger while working on an engine and after it was sewed back on he contracted tetanus, the bacteria that causes what used to be known as lockjaw. "My muscles have been turned into rope," he said. "They don't respond. I can't believe the pain I experience." He takes a host of pharmaceutical drugs to reduce the pain and discomfort. To deal with the side effects of the pharmaceutical drugs, he smokes marijuana. Kridel is one of the 1,038 Jackson County residents -- there are 11,143 state-wide as of July of this year -- who can legally use marijuana for medical reasons. "It's a tool in the tool box that people should be able to use," he said. "When you look at all the narcotics I take every day, pot is a non-issue." He smokes pot for the nausea his pharmaceutical drugs cause. Without it, he said, he would have no appetite and would slowly waste away to nothing. In November of 1998, Oregonians passed a law that stated, in part, "Patients and doctors have found marijuana to be an effective treatment for suffering caused by debilitating medical conditions, and therefore, marijuana should be treated like other medicines." But after eight years of being legal in Oregon, medical marijuana is still largely misunderstood. Federal law considers marijuana to be illegal, despite the fact that 11 states have approved it for medical purposes. And many mainstream doctors refuse to endorse it, even though it was listed in the U.S. Pharmacopeia, the official public standards-setting authority for all prescription and over-the-counter medicines, from 1850 to 1942, and a recent Supreme Court decision -- Conant v. Walters -- protects doctors from prosecution. Despite the law, and the numerous sick Oregonians who benefit from it, law enforcement is still largely unconvinced. Detective Randy Snow of the Ashland Police Department thinks most people in the state medical marijuana program are using the system to obtain otherwise illegal drugs. "It definitely increases the difficulty for us because of those who would abuse the system," he said. "That is what is mostly happening with medical marijuana." Jeanette Carpenter disagrees. She said most people -- police included - -- don't understand the extent of marijuana's medicinal properties. She smokes pot to relieve her asthma. Though this may seem counterintuitive, marijuana acts as an expectorant. In other words, the quality of marijuana that makes people cough actually helps to clear her lungs of her sickness. "Some mornings I have a hard time breathing until I expel the mucous in my lungs," said the 63-year-old grandmother of six. "Generally I don't have to smoke too much." Carpenter tries to live a healthy lifestyle and eats mostly organic, whole foods. For this reason, she prefers using marijuana to the albuterol asthma inhalers that mainstream doctors prescribe. "It kept congestion in my lungs," she said. "Why should I want to use something that would worsen my medical condition?" Though she has used marijuana recreationally since the 1960s, the plant took on a different meaning to her when she learned it could help with her asthma. "Over time I have learned to respect the medicinal properties of marijuana," she said. "I think we should all try to get away from the recreational aspect of it and come to understand the medicinal properties." According to Geri Kulp, a former Ashland resident who helped to write the initial medical marijuana law in Oregon, Carpenter and Kridel are some of the more lucky ones because they know someone who will produce pot for them. A big shortcoming in Oregon's medical marijuana law, she said, is that patients either have to grow it themselves or recruit someone to grow it for them for free. The Oregon Medical Marijuana Act does not allow growers to be compensated for their efforts. "There are a lot of people who see it as a calling," she said about these good-natured growers. Kulp is a volunteer with Voter Power, an organization that hosts medical marijuana clinics around the state, including in Medford. She said they have set up a network of growers to produce pot for needy patients. "We give it to them," she said, noting that she has met people with their medical marijuana cards who couldn't obtain it. Voter Power is currently working to institute a dispensary system in Oregon, as is used in California. A dispensary would give patients a place where they could legally obtain medical marijuana, Kulp said. "The biggest stumbling block to someone who has just been diagnosed with cancer is they can't get it," she said. "Under the current law you need to either grow it yourself or have someone give it to you." Kulp said it is largely untrue that many people in the program aren't really sick. "You can't legally grow enough to make it profitable," she said. "Unless someone is really sick, they aren't going to go through the trouble." But she admitted, "It hasn't deterred the people who were growing and selling marijuana illegally before the medical marijuana act was passed." Perhaps the one point activists like Kulp and law enforcement officers like Detective Randy Snow can agree on is that everyone would benefit if greed and marijuana could be separated. Kulp said the abuse that does happen "all gets back to greed." Snow agreed. "We don't have any problems with people who truly need medicine," he said. "If we could take the greed out of it, it wouldn't be an issue for us." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine