Pubdate: Sun, 14 May 2006 Source: Ocean County Observer (NJ) Copyright: 2006 Ocean County Observer Contact: http://www.ocobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1212 Author: Kim Predham, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) TRENTON IS NEXT BATTLEGROUND IN MARIJUANA FIGHT TOMS RIVER - With the announcement that a medical marijuana bill will be discussed by the state Senate in June, residents and officials in Ocean County - which has become an improbable battleground for the issue - are once again gearing up for a fight. Supporters like Jim Miller, a Dover Township resident whose wife used marijuana to relieve the symptoms of her multiple sclerosis, hailed the decision to hold a June 8 hearing. "It's an important first step," Miller, whose wife Cheryl died in 2003, said. Miller and other propo-nents of the legislation say that marijuana alleviates pain and relieves the effects of more traditional medications, perhaps most notably chemotherapy-induced nausea. Indeed, Miller said that he once used marijuana to relax his wife Cheryl's muscles enough that she could continue physical therapy. "For many really ill people, that (marijuana) is their best medicine," Miller said during a telephone interview this week. But on the other side of the debate are those who say that allowing marijuana for medicinal use is just a front to legalize marijuana for all uses. First Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor Terrence P. Farley, who also heads the county's Narcotics Strike Force, has been a long-time critic of medical marijuana and has frequently debated Miller face-to-face and in the opinion pages of local newspapers. Farley declined to comment for this article, but he told the Associated Press this week that, "This is how they're trying to get marijuana legalized." David Evans, a spokesman for the Drug Free School Coalition, agreed. "I have a lot of compassion for sick and dying people," Evans said. "But what I'm angry about is using sick people to further legalization of marijuana." A cancer survivor himself, Evans says there are several legal medication already available for truly ill individuals. He also contends that prolonged marijuana use can actually do more harm than good, citing testimony from a 2005 Connecticut judiciary hearing asserting that smoked marijuana can affect the lungs' ability to defend themselves from infection. The National Academy of Sciences has found marijuana can help patients with chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting and AIDS wasting. A bill pending in the state Legislature lists cancer, glaucoma, HIV and AIDS, wasting syndrome, chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures and persistent muscle spasms as among the conditions eligible for medical marijuana usage. But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently reiterated its opposition to medical marijuana and the American Medical Association, National Cancer Institute, American Cancer Society and National Multiple Sclerosis Society reject its use. An April report by federal Department of Human Services agencies found no data supported marijuana for general medical use. "We don't base our medical decisions based on what people says help them," Evans said. State Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, who is chairman of a Senate health panel, is expected to hear from experts on medicinal marijuana during the June hearing. The legislative hearing would be the first for a bill long proposed by Sen. Nicholas Scutari, D-Union. The Assembly hasn't scheduled any hearings on the bill, but Gov. Jon S. Corzine - then a gubernatorial candidate - pledged last year that he would sign a medical marijuana bill into law. At next month's hearing, the Senate will likely hear from an expert in marijuana in medicine, the head of the New Jersey State Nurses' Association and a representative from a state that already allows medicinal marijuana, Miller said. Scutari is also expected to testify, Miller said. The hearing is being held to answer any questions Vitale may have, Miller said. A vote would likely not be held until a second round of hearings, he said. "I am hopeful," Miller said. Miller, who co-founded the Coalition for Medical Marijuana-New Jersey, has remained involved in the struggle to make medicinal marijuana available and does not intend to stop anytime soon. But opponents appear equal to the challenge. Members of the Drug Free School Coalition plan to write to state legislators, attend the June hearings and urge citizens to send letters of their own, Evans said. He also wants Scutari to take testimony from marijuana opponents, he said. Eleven states currently allow marijuana to be used for medicinal purposes, even though the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June 2005 that the federal government can prosecute people who use marijuana regardless of state law. Miller is confident that by this time next year, legislation approving medicinal marijuana will be before Corzine. "I allow myself to get hopeful," Miller said. But, he noted that while a year might seem short legislatively, for those with grave illnesses a year may be too late. "There are a lot of people that will die in the process," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake