Pubdate: Wed, 23 Dec 2009
Source: Niles Daily Star (MI)
Copyright: 2009 Niles Daily Star
Contact:  http://www.nilesstar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1555
Author: Jessica Sieff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICINAL MARIJUANA USERS LOOK FOR COMPASSION

When it passed in November 2008, there was no way to  predict just how
the process of assessing and approving  or denying patients for the
program would go. There was  also no way of knowing just how many
Michigan residents  would want to apply for the program, which makes
it  legal for those eligible to grow and use marijuana for  medicinal
purposes.

One year after it became a legal way for those  suffering from illness
and conditions to self-medicate,  the situation is still with a few
wrinkles.

"I find a lot of the resistance that comes with medical  marijuana
comes from ignorance and lack of  understanding," Geoff Hurst,
president of the Southwest  Michigan Compassion Club (SWMCC), said
Monday.

The SWMCC is a local chapter of the Michigan Medical  Marijuana
Association. Its purpose is not only to serve  as a means of support
and advocacy for those  participants in the program, but also a
resource for  information and education.

Hurst said opponents of the law are just as welcome to  any of the
club's meetings in order to learn more about  the benefits of
marijuana as medication or to learn  more about the people who support
the program.

The club recently announced its next meeting, Jan. 11  at the American
Legion Post 51 in Buchanan from 7 to 9  p.m. Hurst said the club plans
to hold its meetings at  the Legion for the foreseeable future.

Since it was passed in November 2008, the legalization  of medical
marijuana in Michigan has been an ongoing  process.

Applicants who are approved for the program receive  cards that
officially recognize them as permitted to  grow and use the drug for
medical reasons.

The process has not been without its snags, however.

In Niles, for instance, the issue grabbed headlines  when Steve Allain
was evicted by the Niles Housing  Commission after he was found to be
growing marijuana  inside his home. Because he lived on federally
subsidized property, state law was superseded and  Allain was forced
to move out after the matter went so  far as to be taken to court.

As it happens, Allain is an example of just one of the  snags Hurst
said many participants are seeing right now  -- a delay in the issuing
of medical marijuana cards.

Hurst took over the role of Allain's caregiver.  Participants can
apply to serve as caregivers to  patients who otherwise might not have
the means to grow  marijuana themselves, as might be the case with
certain  living situations.

Through the process, cards are supposed to be issued  after 20 days.
Hurst said he's been waiting more than  70, for cards that he would
have received for patients  of which he is a caregiver, such as Allain.

He claims "resistance in the top brass of state  government."

"They're behind so everyone is suffering," Geoff's wife  Corin, also a
member of the SWMCC said.

"They claim it's a state budget problem," Hurst said.

"We are experiencing some delays," James McCurtis,  spokesman for the
Michigan Department of Community  Health said Tuesday.

"We are working, we're trying to work as fast and as  quickly as we
can to reduce the backlog," he said. "We  do understand there's some
frustration out there."

Because of that delay, however, McCurtis said for those  waiting on
cards that there were contingencies.

"We have a lot of applications and we have limited  resources," he
said. Altogether, only two or three  employees of the MDCH handle
processing applications  for the program -- which is not their sole
job.

Regardless of the delay, McCurtis said if applicants  are denied, they
will receive a denial letter within  the 20 days. As the delay
continues in issued cards,  McCurtis said patients can use their
applications as  approved cards after the 20 day mark if they have not
  received a denial letter.

"I think the program's working out fine in terms of  people getting
their applications in and we informing  them whether they have been
approved or denied," he  said.

Aside from red tape or tangled processes -- there is  another
challenge facing those proponents and  participants of the law: a bad
reputation.

"That's what we're trying to do, is get the ‘pot  head' label
off," Missy DeForest, member of the SWMCC  said Monday.

The club is trying to make itself more visible while  also presenting
its members in a positive light.

Hurst and DeForest say there continue to meet people  throughout the
community who are suffering through  various medical conditions and
have turned to marijuana  to help with the pain, including many
veterans who  suffer from a variety of disorders and conditions.

"These people are in severe pain," Hurst said of  patients. "While
marijuana doesn't kill the pain, it's  bearable."

For more information, visit  www.swmichigancompassionclub.ning.com or
www.michigan.gov/mmp.

The Michigan Medical Marijuana Program at a glance:

- - 12,049 applications received since April 6, 2009

- - 6,718 patient registrations issued

- - 2,811 caregiver registrations issued

- - 2,079 applications denied -- most due to incomplete  application or
missing documentation

- - An average of 70 applications are received each day

Source: Michigan Department of Community Health 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D