Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jul 2010 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Noor Javed MEDICAL MARIJUANA USERS CAUGHT UP IN RENEWAL DELAY Arbi Kevorkian has always made sure his weed is legal. Every summer for the past four years, Kevorkian has sent off the renewal form to Health Canada two months before his medical marijuana licence expires in July. The licence always arrived back in time for his next prescription refill, allowing Kevorkian to use the otherwise illegal substance without fear of being arrested or charged. But this year, nearly four months after he sent in his renewal form in March, he still hasn't received a response from Health Canada and has no clue when it might come. "When I called them two weeks ago, they just say, 'We're severely backlogged,' " said Kevorkian, whose licence expired last week. His doctor prescribed him five grams of cannabis a day for Tourette syndrome nearly four years ago. "They are forcing us to go the black market," said Kevorkian. He took his concerns to a local compassion club, which provides support and information to patients, and found dozens of other legal marijuana users in the same bind. Blaine Dowdle, founder of Hemp Users Medical Access Network in Toronto, said he has been getting calls from panicked patients who have been awaiting their renewed licences for months. Some have been arrested and charged for possession of marijuana in the interim. Health Canada says licence renewal delays only comes if there are inconsistencies in the renewal or application form. Otherwise it should only take eight to 10 weeks to process. The current delay is due to an "increase in the volume of applications received by the division." The increase could be due to an increasing number of physicians willing to prescribe cannabis for certain conditions, said Dowdle. In June 2009, the last time Health Canada published data by province, 1,631 people had authorization to possess marijuana in Ontario. The Toronto Compassion Club says they have seen their membership rise by 100 people in the last three months. Even though Health Canada may simply be short-staffed, Dowdle believes the problem is the Conservative government's half-hearted support of the program. "The medical marijuana division has been chronically underfunded for years . . . and just because of the ideological stance of the Conservatives, there is a lot of speculation that they are limiting the job of the medical marijuana division to do their jobs effectively." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt