Pubdate: Tue, 03 Feb 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Jack Knox Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/vics.htm (Lucas, Philippe) RULES SURROUNDING MEDICIAL MARIJUANA SOMEWHAT HAZY So, bits of Canada's medical marijuana rules were ruled unconstitutional yesterday, except Ottawa was given a year to fix them, and the Victoria guy charged with growing the dope was convicted, except he got off. Huh? Saying the B.C. Supreme Court decision makes Canada's medical marijuana laws clearer is like saying cowboy boots make Danny DeVito taller -- really, it's just a matter of degree. Justice Marvyn Koenigsberg, sitting in Vancouver, struck down Health Canada regulations that say a licensed marijuana grower may only supply a single client and that bar more than three growers from pooling their resources. Her ruling echoed a 2008 federal court decision that tossed out the one-grower, one-client regulation; coincidentally, Ottawa lost its appeal of that decision yesterday. At issue in Vancouver was a 2004 raid in which 900 pot plants were seized from what turned out to be the Vancouver Island Compassion Society's East Sooke production facility. The guy tending the operation, Mat Beren, was charged with possession and growing for the purpose of trafficking. The judge convicted Beren yesterday, but gave him an absolute discharge, meaning he won't go to jail or have a record. Of broader interest were the constitutional arguments launched by the compassion society, which spent five years and $200,000 arguing that Health Canada's regulations stop many sufferers from getting marijuana. Yesterday's ruling left society founder Philippe Lucas, a Victoria city councillor, declaring a "partial victory." Health Canada introduced its medical marijuana rules in 2001. Ottawa allows the use of pot to ease the pain of the dying and to alleviate the symptoms of multiple sclerosis, spinal cord conditions, cancer, HIV/AIDS, epilepsy, severe forms of arthritis and, on a physician's approval, afflictions that conventional treatment has failed to ease. Individuals are licensed to get marijuana in three ways: They can grow it themselves, designate someone to grow it for them, or buy it through Health Canada from a contractor that grows dope in a Manitoba mine shaft. Not good enough, say critics who argue Ottawa has failed to provide the access and supply demanded by law. They say the mine shaft pot is of poor quality and it takes eight to 12 weeks for applicants to get Health Canada's approval -- an eternity for the terminally ill. Only 2,600 Canadians have received Ottawa's blessing, yet the trial was told that between 400,000 and a million of them use marijuana for medicinal purposes. Sitting in the half-light are the compassion clubs, operating openly, sort-of-tolerated but still outside the law -- meaning they often make up their own rules. The nine-year-old Vancouver Island Compassion Society, with 850 members -- twice as many as at the time of the bust - -- has stricter rules than does Victoria's Cannabis Buyers Club, which has more than 2,400 clients. Where the former group will only sell marijuana to someone on the recommendation of a physician (it says 300 local doctors have done so) the latter merely requires proof of diagnosis of a permanent disability or disease. Compassion clubs typically pay growers $2,200 to $2,600 for a pound of marijuana. The clubs then sell for $7 to $12 a gram. That's more than the $5 charged by Health Canada, but usually 10 to 20 per cent less than pot goes for on the street. What Monday's ruling means to all that, who knows? Lucas said the compassion society needs time to study a decision that took the judge two hours to read. He also said he wants to work co-operatively with Health Canada. So does Eric Nash, who runs Island Harvest Organic B.C. Cannabis in Duncan. Yet he is still waiting for Health Canada to respond to his months-old application to grow pot for several hundred would-be clients. Koenigsberg gave Ottawa a year to change its one-grower, one-client rule, so Nash isn't sure where he stands. "Another shade of grey enters the picture." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin