Pubdate: Tue, 24 Aug 2010
Source: Helena Independent Record (MT)
Copyright: 2010 Helena Independent Record
Contact:  http://helenair.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1187
Author: Mike Dennison
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

REVISED LAW IN THE PIPE

A legislative panel Monday hashed out a draft rewrite of Montana's 
medical-marijuana laws that would tighten regulations on who can 
grow, distribute and use the drug.

But even if the bipartisan committee ends up agreeing on the draft 
bill, lawmakers said it would be just one step in a lengthy process - 
and that many more proposals are likely to come before the 2011 
Legislature, in response to the dramatic growth of medical-marijuana 
businesses and users.

Rep. Diane Sands, D-Missoula, who chairs the Children, Families, 
Health and Human Services Interim Committee, said she expects bills 
to be introduced next year to repeal medical marijuana, put it back 
before the voters again or perhaps legalize the drug entirely and 
"tax the heck out it."

"Hopefully this will be the bill that's somewhere in the middle," she 
said of the measure discussed Monday by the committee.

The eight-member, bipartisan panel is expected to vote Tuesday 
whether to draft a bill that tightens many aspects of Montana's 
medical-marijuana program, which was placed into law by voters in 2004.

The draft bill would require medical-marijuana users to be Montana 
residents, require fingerprinting, background checks and licensing 
for marijuana suppliers, and make it harder to get a marijuana card 
for treatment of "chronic pain."

At Monday's meeting, medical-marijuana users and businesspeople 
objected to many aspects of the proposal, saying it shouldn't unduly 
restrict what's become a legitimate business and health tool for many 
Montanans.

"It sounds so many times . that we're looking for ways to box this in 
completely and make it go away," said Rick Rosio of Montana Pain 
Management in Missoula. "Why not fix it in a common-sense 
application? Please keep the patients first in mind."

Those in favor, however, said the draft puts some needed limits on 
what many see as a wide-open program that's made it hard for law 
enforcement to know who's breaking the law and who's not.

"We think it addresses the law-enforcement concerns; we think it's a 
good bill," said Mike Batista, head of the Division of Criminal 
Investigation at the Department of Justice. "We really think that 
this bill represents what the voters thought they were voting for 
when they passed the initiative."

The number of Montanans holding medical-marijuana cards has more than 
tripled since January, from about 7,300 people to 22,740 as of Monday.

The committee began work on the rewrite this year, in response to the 
rapidly escalating numbers of people obtaining medical-marijuana 
cards and an accompanying boom in marijuana-related suppliers.

Any draft bill endorsed by the panel would be introduced at the 2011 
Legislature, which convenes next January, but wouldn't become law 
without legislative approval and the signature of the governor.

"This bill is going to be changed a lot before it passes the next 
session," said Rep. Gary MacLaren, R-Victor, and a member of the committee.

Several marijuana users and businesspeople who testified Monday 
objected to requiring two physicians to approve marijuana use for 
treatment of chronic pain, saying it's difficult enough finding one 
doctor who may recommend marijuana, especially in rural areas.

"If you require me to go to two doctors, where's the second doctor?" 
asked Brad Comer of Ennis, a marijuana patient and provider. "Where's 
the pain specialist I can go to, to sign my second slip?"

They also said limits on the number of patients that a business can 
serve or on the amount of marijuana that a patient can have in a 
month's time could harm both the businesses and patients.

"I have clients that need much more than two ounces a month," said 
Charlton Campbell of Montana Buds, which operates in Butte and 
Bozeman. "They're in pain. . I'm not about to tell them, 'No, you 
can't have this, this is my limit.' The state hasn't had the 
opportunity to see the huge benefits of persons like myself, running 
this as a small business, giving us the opportunity to employ people, 
to add to the tax revenues. . Support the people who are doing this."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom