Pubdate: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 Source: Cowichan News Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Cowichan News Leader Contact: http://www.cowichannewsleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314 MEDICAL POT ADVOCATES HOPING TO OPEN STOREFRONT IN DUNCAN Help is coming for Cowichanians wishing to ford a swamp of government paperwork and legally obtain medical marijuana. A local group, represented by Mill Bay lawyer Kirk Tousaw, aims to open the storefront Medical Cannabis Access Centre in the Duncan Garage, possibly by month's end. The opening date is pending finalization of the centre's business plan, plus city permits and more. The idea, said social-justice advocate Tousaw, is to educate valley patients about their rights under Canada's federal medical-marijuana program. Staff will help folks complete the necessary federal forms, then refer them to local doctors who could prescribe pot. But even with a physician's support, getting a government licence to gain and possess medical marijuana can take some eight months, explained Tousaw. "Medical marijuana is legal, but almost no one can get a licence to use it." That bureaucratic morass pushes many patients to buy illegal weed from dope dealers, a situation centre founders want to prevent. "To get this relatively safe, benign substance you have to go through a tortuous process," Tousaw said. "We need not criminalize people for their choice of medicine." It's unknown how many valley patients hold licences, and how many buy street cannabis for various legitimate conditions. However, there are 6,000-some legal medical cannabis users in the country, he said. The feds' haywire pot program frustrates many patients in need of medical weed, signaled Tousaw, due to government suspicion healthy folks simply want recreational reefer. "Uptake in the federal program has been low. It's appalling. "The program only exists because the courts ordered it," Tousaw said of Ottawa's medical-marijuana system created in 2000. "The supply piece also remains a problem." Duncan's access centre will not be involved in finding or supplying medical weed, he stressed. "If you can legally possess it, you can grow it yourself but that's not possible for challenged people, for example." Local legal, organic growers, Eric Nash and Wendy Little, supply licensed patients with legal medical cannabis. Legal growers are currently restricted to two patients, Tousaw said. Nash and Little grow cannabis cloned in various TCH levels tailored to a patient's particular malady. THC is the active ingredient in medical cannabis that can be smoked, taken as tea, or eaten perhaps in cookies. Nash and Little are fighting to have the feds' client ceiling lifted. Legal patients' other option is buying medical marijuana at $150 an ounce from a federal grow-op located somewhere in Saskatchewan, Tousaw said. "The program's currently a Byzantine nightmare," he summed. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D