Pubdate: Wed, 30 Jun 2010 Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Copyright: 2010 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/forms/emaileditor.asp Website: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 Author: Gerald Turetsky Note: Gerald Turetsky is chairman of the Manhattan-based Respect For Law Alliance Inc.'s committee on civil and criminal justice. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MEDICAL MARIJUANA TOO DANGEROUS, COSTLY Bills in the state Senate and Assembly to legalize medical marijuana are set for a major, last-minute push. If they are passed, New Yorkers are in for serious financial and health problems. Common sense dictates before the Legislature moves forward with such a high-risk program, thorough hearings must be held. Marijuana is not a safe drug. Over time, damage to users' lungs and brains are measurable and significant. Marijuana is widely regarded as a "gateway drug" that introduces children to the drug culture. Most kids who become addicts move on to other more potent drugs. Although most who experiment with marijuana do not become addicted, young people who avoid it altogether tend not to become drug addicts of any kind. Contrary to the allure of a potential huge new source of tax revenue from the legal sale of cannabis, legalizing medical marijuana will shift the burden of monitoring its safe manufacture and distribution to the state Health Department. The federal Food and Drug Administration will not participate in testing and monitoring the safety of an illegal drug. The additional cost to state agencies and local police and health departments throughout New York to regulate the distribution to legitimate medical users will be expensive and mostly fruitless. How do we know? By looking at the failed experiments of legalizing marijuana in Los Angeles. Samples of medical marijuana purchased at dispensaries in L.A. have contained up to 1,600 times the legal limit for insecticide poison. In New York, marijuana frequently comes laced with angel dust or small quantities of arsenic for added kick, as well as various crop protective poisons. Los Angeles officials say they found using medical marijuana purchased at medical dispensaries is like sprinkling insecticide on a salad and eating it. Marijuana is has other health risks. THC levels vary greatly. In recent years its potency has risen by up to 600 percent and, in some cases, 1,500 percent. These are dangerous levels, especially for people with weakened immune deficiency systems, heart conditions and psychiatric illnesses. The pending marijuana bills do not require a prescription from a licensed physician in good standing. The Los Angeles experience is predictable. Most prescriptions are dispensed without physical examinations or diagnosis of a medical condition. The Senate and Assembly bills provide little guidance or restrictions on what constitute a valid medical condition. Medical marijuana dispensaries will proliferate quickly. Many will be near schools, parks and inner-city neighborhoods where illegal drug consumption is already a problem. Count on an explosion of distribution networks that will attract addicted drug users. They will bring myriad crime problems with them. Los Angeles is in the process of trying to close down hundreds of these so-called medical dispensaries. New York is on the verge of welcoming them with open arms. The state Legislature is moving quietly to legalize medical marijuana on the run, without proper study and analysis to eliminate the known dangers. This is not prudent or wise. A rush to legalize pot without public debate is just ignoring the dangers and hoping for the best. Skip medical marijuana. New Yorkers will be safer, and it will save money, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake