Pubdate: Sun, 18 Apr 2010
Source: Gazette, The (Colorado Springs, CO)
Copyright: 2010 The Gazette
Contact: http://www.gazette.com/sections/opinion/submitletter/
Website: http://www.gazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/165
Authors: Tom Roeder, Eileen Welsome and Maria St. Louis-Sanchez

MEDICAL MARIJUANA COMES WITH STRINGS ATTACHED

Parts of Colorado's growing medical marijuana industry remain 
shrouded in smoke, including who can sell the marijuana and how it 
can be distributed.

But much is clear.

Legally obtained marijuana can get users fired, jailed or turned down 
for foster parent jobs.

Restrictions on medical marijuana use abound, even as dispensaries 
sprout up in nearly every neighborhood in Colorado Springs and as the 
state processes 1,000 applications per day for legal marijuana use.

High at work? Experts say users can be fired, even if they use 
marijuana legally.

Stoned on the road? Police say users can pick up a DUI for driving 
under the influence of marijuana.

Seeking to help kids? El Paso County won't let users of medical 
marijuana house foster children, and it could be an issue for adoption.

Amendment 20, approved by voters in 2000, allows people with 
"debilitating medical conditions" to possess and use marijuana legally.

It doesn't require employers to tolerate marijuana in the workplace, 
though. And it allows cops to bust legal marijuana users who've had 
too much or used it in a manner that breaks other laws.

On the Job

When medical marijuana users show up for work, their legal marijuana 
can quickly turn from painkiller to career killer.

"We see it all the time," said Anne Peterson, of Professional 
Compliance in Pueblo, one of the area's largest drug-screening firms.

Peterson said her company deals with a half-dozen people or more 
every week who contest their drug test findings by claiming they used 
marijuana legally for medical reasons.

"We cannot accept that as a viable excuse," Peterson said. "Most of 
the employees hear what they want to hear - that this card is a 
get-out-of-jail-for-free card. But if they come up positive in the 
test, their medical marijuana card is not any good."

Federal contractors and interstate truck drivers are banned from 
marijuana use by federal law, which doesn't recognize medical marijuana.

Others are caught by drug-free-workplace policies that generally 
don't include provisions for medical marijuana. So employees who use 
it for any reason get the same treatment as those who smoke crack cocaine.

"If you have a no-tolerance policy, you can't make exceptions," said 
Liz Aragon, who leads the Colorado Springs Society for Human Resource 
Management.

Workers can't even argue that their marijuana use is protected by the 
federal Americans with Disabilities Act, because the federal 
government doesn't recognize medical marijuana.

"Just because they have a card, it doesn't make it legal with 
work-related policies," Aragon said. "If there is a no-tolerance drug 
policy, there is a no-tolerance drug policy."

Kris Hermes, of the California-based marijuana-advocacy group 
Americans for Safe Access, said drug-free policies could cost 
thousands of medical marijuana users their livelihood.

"The law was never designed to prevent patients from being productive 
members of society," he said.

Workplace marijuana use was addressed recently in California, where a 
court shot down arguments from a fired worker who legally used 
medical marijuana and found in favor of the employer.

On the Streets

Amendment 20 didn't legalize marijuana outright. Nor did it give high 
users a free pass to drive. And it included strict limits on how much 
marijuana patients can possess.

But a medical marijuana registry card does give users some slack with police.

"Our voters voted for medical marijuana, but in 2006 they rejected 
legalizing marijuana," Fourth Judicial District Attorney Dan May 
said. "I'm hoping the Legislature listens to the voters and will 
provide medical marijuana for those who medically need it, but won't 
legalize marijuana."

Under state law, medical marijuana use is ruled out as a criminal 
defense for anything other than possession or consumption of marijuana.

When a cop pulls a driver over and gets a whiff of the distinctive 
smoke, trouble doesn't end with a registry card.

Marijuana, and any drug that can impair a driver, can lead to a DUI, 
just like alcohol.

Still, police have mellowed on marijuana possession.  Colorado 
Springs police say they show discretion with medical marijuana users 
and recently quit seizing marijuana grown for medical uses.

"That's a big cultural shift for law enforcement. One time, you're 
looking at something that's illegal, and all of a sudden it's legal," 
said Lt. Al Harmon of the Police Department's drug unit. "That takes 
some getting used to."

Right now, the drug unit focuses on big marijuana operations, not 
individuals with a medical marijuana card.

Police go after dispensaries that clearly have more plants than they 
are supposed to.

Harmon said there were 110 known dispensaries or 
medical-marijuana-growing operations in the city in March - more than 
double the number of Starbucks coffee shops in El Paso County.

May said those dispensaries have been a target for robbery. His 
office is taking a close look at the businesses.

"If you are allowed six plants and you have seven, we're working with 
the patient rather than bringing charges," he said. "But if you have 
100 plants and you're allowed six, you betcha that's a crime."

A state appellate court recently ruled that people growing medical 
marijuana must be caregivers, a term that police interpret to mean a 
business that provides more than just marijuana.

"If you are just selling marijuana, that is illegal even under this 
amendment," May said. "We are enforcing that."

Social Services

Medical marijuana hasn't posed problems for officials with El Paso 
County's Department of Human Services, but they're ready if it comes up.

Maija Schiedel, administrator for DHS Youth and Family Services, said 
policies on medical marijuana are evolving.

The department has decided not to place foster children in homes 
where medical marijuana is used.

"We have a lot of vulnerable children. Many of them have their own 
issues around drug and alcohol use," she said. "We don't think it's a 
good idea to expose kids further."

Asked if the department would consider placing children in foster 
homes or group homes where there were grow operations or 
dispensaries, she responded "absolutely not." 
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