Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2008
Source: Concord Monitor (NH)
Copyright: 2008 Monitor Publishing Company
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/WbpFSdHB
Website: http://www.concordmonitor.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/767
Author: Cynthia Needham

R.I. MAY SEE LEGAL MARIJUANA SALES

State Allows Drug Use For Suffering Patients

A year after making medical marijuana legal for patients to use, Rhode
Island lawmakers say it's time to establish a safe and legal means for
them to obtain the drug.

Right now, qualifying patients may grow marijuana, but they can't
legally buy it. As a result, they often resort to buying it on the
street.

Some legislators and doctors call that scenario an unwanted weak link
in an otherwise successful law. They've heard too many stories like
that of Buddy Coolen, 29, a medical marijuana user who three months
ago was robbed at gunpoint by a drug dealer while trying to buy
marijuana to treat his debilitating gastrointestinal condition.

Now state Rep. Thomas Slater and state Sen. Rhoda Perry, Providence
Democrats who sponsored the permanent medical marijuana law, propose
expanding its scope to create licensed marijuana dispensaries.

These "compassion centers," would legally grow and distribute the drug
at affordable prices for the 359 patients who now are in the state's
program. The centers would be regulated by the state health department
and would offer education services to patients and their caregivers.

Nationwide, the use of medical marijuana has increased in recent
years.

At least 12 states now have laws allowing its use. But according to
the Rhode Island Patient Advocacy Coalition, only New Mexico and
California have laws governing dispensaries.

California's centers are not regulated by the state and need not be
nonprofit agencies, and New Mexico has not yet licensed any clinics,
said Jesse Stout, executive director of the Rhode Island coalition.

Rhode Island's compassion center proposal comes with powerful critics,
including the governor and others who say the state shouldn't be
passing laws that ignore federal law, which still bans marijuana usage.

But supporters contend the centers are crucial. Testifying at a recent
state senate hearing, Dr. Todd Handel, a pain-management specialist,
said such clinics would resolve a host of obstacles that currently
accompany the use of medical marijuana in Rhode Island.

"The problem now is, how are my patients supposed to get it? If I
write a prescription for (the powerful painkiller) Oxycontin, they're
not going to the street to buy it, they're going to a pharmacy," he
said. "But when it comes to marijuana I can't tell them how much to
take, how to use it and where they can get it because it's illegal for
them to get it. So I'm saying to them, 'you have a diagnosis that the
state allows for but it's illegal for you to obtain it and I can't
tell you how to do it.'"

Handel was one of several doctors and almost a half dozen patients who
testified in support of the proposed centers.

They all said the state's medical marijuana program has been
invaluable in helping relieve the chronic pain and nausea that
accompanies cancer, AIDS and other illnesses.

GOP state Rep. Nicholas Gorham says the state should not be in the
pot-selling business.

"To continue to flout the federal law and to start dealerships or
whatever you want to call them is just irresponsible," said Gorham,
who has long been an opponent of marijuana legislation.

He pointed to a spate of federal raids on California dispensaries in
recent years as examples of the problems Rhode Island could face if it
creates such centers.

Health department officials voiced similar concerns, and said they
have no expertise in licensing such facilities or establishing
regulations.

A spokesman for Republican Gov. Donald Carcieri said he continues to
oppose any medical marijuana legislation, having twice vetoed other
such measures.
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