Pubdate: Wed, 25 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

REWRITE OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW ADVANCES

A bill tightening Montana's medical-marijuana regulations will be
drafted and forwarded to the 2011 Legislature, a legislative panel
decided Tuesday.

Medical-marijuana users and growers warned that the proposal contains
some unnecessary restrictions on patients and suppliers of the drug,
which has taken off as a booming business in Montana the past year.

But legislators who voted for the measure said it's just one step in a
lengthy legislative process, and that any proposal is bound to be
changed many times before it might become law.

"This is a bill that, at this point, is nobody's favorite child," said
Rep. Diane Sands, D-Missoula, the chair of the Children, Families,
Health and Human Services Interim Committee. "No one here is
suggesting this will be the final version of this bill."

Sands also said the panel's work is not an effort to prevent anyone
with a "legitimate health issue" from getting medical marijuana, but
rather to stop what most members see as abuses of the system by people
who aren't really sick.

The bipartisan panel voted 7-1 to have the bill drafted and prepared
for introduction at the 2011 Legislature, which convenes in January.
The only committee member voting against the proposal was Rep. Mary
Caferro, D-Helena, who earlier indicated she thought it contained too
many restrictions on legal recipients of medical marijuana.

The panel has been working for months on a rewrite of Montana's
medical-marijuana laws, in response to the dramatic growth of
medical-marijuana businesses and users.

Montana voters approved medical marijuana by initiative in 2004. The
state had less than 4,000 medical-marijuana patients a year ago; now,
about 22,700 people have a medical-marijuana card.

The bill endorsed by the committee Tuesday would require
medical-marijuana users to be Montana residents; require
fingerprinting, background checks and licensing for marijuana
suppliers; make it harder to get a marijuana card for treatment of
"chronic pain;" and allow cities and counties to use zoning and other
laws to restrict, but not prohibit, marijuana businesses.

At Tuesday's meeting, providers of medical marijuana objected most
often to a provision that says patients who want the drug to treat
chronic pain must get a recommendation from two doctors instead of
one.

Bill Hund, a medical-marijuana caregiver in Butte, said his patients
don't have much money and can't afford to see more than one physician.

"I ask you to show a little compassion to these people," he
said.

They also objected to a new proposed limit of two ounces of marijuana
per month per patient, saying some patients simply need more to treat
their debilitating condition.

Tom Daubert of Helena, the head of Patients and Families United, a
lobby group representing medical-marijuana patients, said he agreed
that abuses of the law have occurred.

The most important steps the Legislature can take to curb those abuses
are more clearly defining what physicians must do in recommending
marijuana for a patient and regulating marijuana providers and
growers, requiring them to file detailed reports on how much marijuana
they produce and for whom they produce it, he said.

"If you focus on those two (items), you would wipe away the vast
majority of the abuses we've seen," Daubert said. 
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