Pubdate: Sun, 14 Feb 2010 Source: Chico Enterprise-Record (CA) Copyright: 2010 Chico Enterprise-Record Contact: http://www.chicoer.com/feedback Website: http://www.chicoer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/861 Note: Letters from newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority MARIJUANA LAWS ADD TO THE HAZE Our view: At some point, logic has to enter into the equation when people keep dreaming up lenient marijuana laws. As the era of medical marijuana in California moves through its 14th year, laws on the matter have only grown increasingly murky. It truly seems the people drafting these measures were stoned at the time, embracing ideas that might have seemed really cool under a THC fog, but that just didn't work in real life. Begin with Proposition 215, which started it all in when in passed in November 1996. It said people whose medical conditions might be aided by marijuana could possess it with a doctor's recommendation. Which conditions? How rigorous a medical review was required? How much marijuana could a person have? How were folks supposed to legally obtain that marijuana, since sales of the substance were -- and still are -- illegal? Rational people would have answered these questions in the proposition, but those kinds of details just didn't seem to matter to the authors. And indeed, they remain unresolved. There is no systematic research into what diseases marijuana might assist, and in what quantities. By most accounts, the doctors who issue the lion's share of medical marijuana recommendations make just a cursory review of their patients. Those doctors advertise their services, implying that it's simple. For a fee, you too can get a recommendation. So we've approved a "medicine" in this state, without paying any attention to the diseases it is supposed to treat. The result is a situation in which it is so easy to get a recommendation that many people do so just to protect access to their intoxicant of choice, rather than to treat an ailment. The issue of supply also remains unresolved, although SB 420 was passed by the Legislature seven years after 215 passed in an attempt to do that. It set limits on how much marijuana a person could possess, but those were overturned by a court. It also allowed users to work cooperatively to grow a pot crop, as Proposition 215 could have been interpreted as requiring every patient to grow his or her own. Even with that there's the matter of marijuana grows' impact on their neighbors. They stink. They're worth tons of money, and they can't be concealed outdoors because their scent announces their presence to passersby. They are conspicuous targets for theft, and magnets for the violence that often accompanies theft. They're a problem that's unaddressed. And the rules governing co-ops have that same smoky quality that hangs around all these measures. As a result, the distinction between a true cooperative effort to produce pot and a dispensary that secures a supply and sells it to others has become obscured. So, the Chico City Council comes to the conclusion dispensaries are OK, and begins figuring out how to zone for them. District Attorney Mike Ramsey, with a bit of hyperbole, threatens to throw the councilors in jail for promoting drug sales. And now in November, we're likely to be voting on a measure that would eliminate all state laws against possession and use of marijuana, and set up a system to tax sales of the substance. It just ignores the fact marijuana possession and use is still a violation of federal law, which trumps everything we've done and might do in this state, if the feds decide to push the matter. What a mess it would be if that passed. We'd have a state law in direct opposition to federal law. But not so long ago, somewhere in a smoky room, some folks probably that was a great idea. Yeah. Wow. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D