Pubdate: Fri, 17 Jul 2009 Source: Concord Monitor (NH) Copyright: 2009 Monitor Publishing Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/WbpFSdHB Website: http://www.cmonitor.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/767 KEEP WORKING ON MARIJUANA LEGISLATION Gov. John Lynch closed the door on the legal use of medical marijuana this month when he vetoed a bill that would have made New Hampshire the 14th state to legalize its use - but he didn't lock it. His veto message ended with regret that he couldn't sign the bill into law. The governor claims that the bill, despite monumental efforts by lawmakers to revise it to meet his concerns, still contains too many flaws. Since the law would be the toughest of any state that sanctions the use of medical marijuana, those concerns are almost certainly overblown. The House, which is not expected to convene again until fall, passed the bill by a vote of 232-108. It could almost certainly vote to override Lynch's veto and it should. But an override by the Senate, which approved the bill by a 14-10 vote, is hardly assured. Patients suffering from chronic pain, multiple sclerosis, the effects of chemotherapy and other medical conditions that can be alleviated by the use of marijuana and their advocates should work to win over more senators. To the extent that Lynch is worried about the political ramifications of signing a marijuana bill, that would get him off the hook. Patients and their advocates should also strive to provide Lynch the assurances he needs and amend it further if necessary. The alternative is needless suffering, and the misguided branding as criminals of people forced to break the law to ease their pain. Congress has not approved the use of medical marijuana but U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said he would only sanction prosecution if patients or distribution centers sell the drug to people who have not been certified to possess it. The checks contained in the New Hampshire bill make that unlikely to happen. The first version of the bill would have set up a system similar to those used in states that allow certified patients to cultivate and possess small amounts of marijuana. The alternative is to allow patients to purchase marijuana at licensed facilities. Lynch prefers the latter approach, and the bill was rewritten to allow up to five nonprofit "compassion centers" to dispense up to two ounces of the drug to each patient over 10 days. Lynch believes that dosage may be too high. Some states allow less, others more. In some cases a few grams of marijuana per day in several cigarettes may be enough to rekindle appetites suppressed by chemotherapy or relieve pain. In other cases, effective dosages are much higher. The handful of patients in the National Institute on Drug Abuse's Compassionate Investigational Drug Program use from four ounces to roughly a pound per month. Lynch and lawmakers should set a limit high enough to be effective with most patients, then amend the law later as evidence merits. Distribution centers in some states charge between $300 and $600 per ounce for the drug, or roughly the street price of illegal marijuana. If New Hampshire's compassion centers sell the drug cheaply enough, they could be a good, and more controlled, alternative to allowing patients to grow marijuana themselves. There's no reason that the drug should cost patients, or insurers, as much per year as an expensive prescription medication. Innumerable drugs, both illicit and prescription, are far more dangerous, and abused much more often, than marijuana. A vote for its legalization is a vote for compassion. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr