Pubdate: Tue, 30 Nov 2010 Source: Daily Nonpareil, The (IA) Copyright: 2010 The Daily Nonpareil Contact: http://www.Nonpareilonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3234 NOW IS NOT THE TIME The Iowa Board of Pharmacy voted last week to propose legislation that would reclassify marijuana and make it easier to legalize the drug for medicinal purposes. The board voted 6-0 on Wednesday to propose a bill defining marijuana as a Schedule II drug, many of which may be used for strictly controlled medical treatments. Iowa is one of more than 30 states that currently lists marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which are defined as having almost no legal purpose. In addition to the change suggested by the pharmacy board, it would fall to lawmakers to create and approve a medical-marijuana program if they accept the board's recommendation. Such a program - and enforcement of the needed regulations - would require creation of a new bureaucracy or expansion of an existing one. The board's proposal faces a rocky future at best. Despite the pharmacy board's most recent recommendation, Gov.-elect Terry Branstad and several legislators have said they oppose the idea. Supporters of the bill say marijuana can help patients with cancer, AIDS, multiple sclerosis and other ailments. On the flip side of the coin, opponents say the medical-marijuana movement is a front for people who want to use the drug recreationally. Last week's pharmacy board vote came as no surprise. Board members last February unanimously recommended that the Legislature clear up the issue by declaring marijuana a Schedule II drug and set guidelines on how it would be distributed and used. At that time, the Democratic majority leaders in the Iowa House of Representatives ducked what could have been a troublesome election issue by saying lawmakers didn't need to act because of a clause suggesting the pharmacy board could set rules on the issue. Now Republicans, who will regain control of the House come January are simply not commenting on the issue. We suspect their silence is for the same political reason. Pharmacy board members adroitly sidestepped the political fallout by tossing the ball to lawmakers. A second change under the bill proposed last week would remove decades-old language that some lawmakers believe gives the board authority to allow medical marijuana without legislative action. For politicians, the medical marijuana issue remains a potential minefield. The Associated Press noted a poll published in the Des Moines Register in February showed 64 percent of Iowans supported allowing patients to use marijuana for medical purposes if their doctors approved. But that same poll found that 70 percent of Iowa opposed legalizing the drug for recreational use. In addition to the obvious political implications, the major dilemma facing lawmakers is creation of a controlled distribution system and enforcement of the regulations that would control such a system. That would require funding the state does not have. That lack of funding might well be the excuse lawmakers use to avoid the issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt