Pubdate: Thu, 15 May 2008 Source: Willits News (CA) Copyright: 2008 Willits News Contact: http://www.willitsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4085 Author: Susan B. Jordan Note: Susan B. Jordan is a Ukiah attorney. Cited: The No on B campaign http://www.nomeasureb.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Measure+G LIMITS WITHOUT CONSIDERATION Before any of us decides that Mendocino County should vote for Measure B and adopt the state limits of six plants, etc, we should know these limits were decided without any real consideration by the legislators, by patient advocates or by doctors. Measure B proponents are telling us six plants has to be enough for any patient, because those numbers were arrived in Sacramento by holding hearings into the proper limit, and getting medical input on the subject. They are wrong. No hearings into the amount of marijuana needed by a patient, nor how much usable marijuana a plant will produce, were held when the state law went into effect in 2004. No public or medical input went into the establishment of the six-plant limit. California Health and Safety Code section 11362(a)-(f), enacted in 2004, says a patient or caregiver may possess no more than six mature plants or 12 immature plants. This law originated as SB420, which was the result of an effort by then-Attorney General Bill Lockyer to enact legislation to provide a state medical marijuana user card, and to set some guidelines for medical marijuana, following the passage of the Compassionate Use Act in 1996. Lockyer set up the Attorney General's Medical Marijuana Task Force for this purpose. The task force met for three or four years, and was unable to come to agreement on any appropriate plant number limits. The medical marijuana representatives who sat on the task force proposed numbers. Law enforcement Advertisement representatives who were also members of the task force passed up their opportunity to have input in to the plant limits by refusing to suggest any number, opposing the entire idea of medical marijuana, even though the voters had overwhelmingly passed it into law. Ultimately, because no agreement could be reached, legislative staff people proposed the six plant limit, and without hearings, this number was written in to the bill and passed. The bill was successful in establishing an identification card to be issued by the counties, which remains in use. It was not successful in setting limits based on either science or the needs of the patients. This is the very reason the same law permits counties and cities to exceed the enacted limits, because the local counties just might know more about their communities and its residents than legislators in Sacramento. Fifteen other counties in the state have taken the opportunity allowed by the law to tailor their medical marijuana ordinances to their own needs. Mendocino County should continue to allow itself this opportunity in consideration of our local citizens. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake