Pubdate: Fri, 3 Dec 2010 Source: Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, NJ) Copyright: 2010 Courier-Post Contact: http://www.courierpostonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/826 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.) COMPROMISE ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA Keep Rules Tight to Minimize Abuses, but Make Sure Patients Will Actually Use the Program. Upon further thought, Gov. Chris Christie said Monday he won't allow for any easing of the proposed restrictions the state Department of Health and Senior Services has proposed for implementing New Jersey's medical marijuana law approved almost a year ago. As we said before in urging the governor and his health commissioner to reconsider some aspects of the proposed rules, we understand why it's important to err on the side of caution with medical marijuana. Of the 13 states that have legalized marijuana for medical use by people suffering from cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and a few other ailments, two in particular -- California and Colorado -- have seen things get way out of hand. The number of people abusing the "medical use" allowance and simply getting a prescription to smoke just for recreational use in those states has exploded, as have the number of "dispensaries" (stores, really). Also, the number of people growing marijuana illegally has exploded. Our governor doesn't want that to happen in New Jersey and he is right to protect against it happening. New Jersey legislators didn't vote to decriminalize marijuana last year when they passed the Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act. They voted simply to let those people legitimately suffering from chronic, severe pain or nausea or vision problems to have a legal means to use a drug many of them are already using to relieve those symptoms. But by having so few distribution centers around the state -- just four to cover 21 counties; by cutting out certain diseases/ailments from qualifying for a prescription and by foolishly capping the percentage of the psychoactive chemical tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) allowed in medical marijuana distributed in New Jersey at 10 percent even though the legal, available prescription drug Marinol is 99 percent THC, the administration is torpedoing the law. These rules and a few others, if put in place as they're written now, will more than likely lead to most patients in this state who need marijuana to treat their illnesses continuing to buy the drug illegally. They'll continue to fuel the illegal drug trade and continue to risk going to jail because the legal option the state offers is inconvenient and less effective than the illegal option. That's foolish. We would hope it won't have to come to a legislative battle this month that would pit Democrats in the Senate and Assembly against the Republican governor. What we hope is that the governor listens to the legitimate concerns about the proposed rules raised by the people who depend on marijuana to ease their suffering and overcome their chronic pain. We believe that program rules and a distribution system can be created that ensure both minimal abuse of New Jersey's medical marijuana program by recreational users and convenient access to prescribed doses of the drug for patients who certainly don't want to be lawbreakers; they just want to get through each day free of pain. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake