Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jul 2010 Source: Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, NJ) Copyright: 2010 Courier-Post Contact: http://www.courierpostonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/826 STATE MUST FIND ANOTHER GROWER With Rutgers out as a medical marijuana cultivator, governor must follow other states' lead. In trying to have Rutgers University, a state institution, do all the marijuana cultivating for the state's approved-but-not-yet-operational medical marijuana program, it's clear what the goal was: Keep tight government control over what is still an illegal drug. Friday, Rutgers officials announced the university wants no part of growing and harvesting marijuana for the state program. Rutgers officials say that growing marijuana for medical use by AIDS and cancer patients and New Jerseyans with other ailments would jeopardize federal funding the university receives. Last year Rutgers got $552 million in various monies from Washington, including research contracts, grants, student loans and work study funds. The announcement may have taken some in Trenton by surprise, but regardless, it should not hold up the state from beginning the legal dispensation of marijuana to patients who need it, we hope before the end of this year. If Rutgers doesn't want to grow marijuana, so be it. Find another grower or growers, whether it's another state institution or private "farmers" who will contract with the state. The governor, a former federal prosecutor who doesn't seem enthusiastic about legalized medical marijuana, obviously wants to make sure marijuana grown for patients with a doctor's prescription doesn't escape onto the illegal drug market. That's understandable. Legislators did not vote to legalize recreational use of the drug, as some states have inched toward, only medical use. People with AIDS and cancer, glaucoma, leukemia and various chronic pains find significant relief for their pain and other symptoms from smoking marijuana. For some, it's the only medicine that works. These New Jerseyans should not have to fear arrest and prosecution for using marijuana as a medicine. Nor should the government impede their ability to acquire this medicinal substance. Rather, it should help to facilitate their acquisition of marijuana through secure, legal means. This is the humane thing to do. It's why lawmakers rightly approved medical marijuana. Fourteen other states already have medical marijuana programs. These states don't rely on public universities to do all the growing, as Christie had wanted. So all the governor and our legislators have to do is find which of these states does the best job limiting who can grow marijuana, and making sure it is done securely, and copy that model. That's it. If Rutgers doesn't want to grow, it's unlikely other colleges or universities in the state will want to, either. So let's not waste time while good people are suffering and waiting eagerly for this program to begin. The state must simply find another potential grower or growers -- and there will be plenty offering to do so -- and make sure the growing facilities will be secure and move forward with implementation of the system. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt