Pubdate: Fri, 18 Feb 2011
Source: South End, The (Wayne State U, MI Edu)
Copyright: 2011 The South End
Contact: http://thesouthend.wayne.edu/index.php/feedback/opinion/1
Website: http://thesouthend.wayne.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2932
Author: Robert Guttersohn, The South End
Referenced: Activist Boot Camp http://www.safeaccessnow.org/article.php?id=6233

ORG HOSTS MARIJUANA ACTIVISM BOOT CAMP

Simulcast to Inform Advocates and Users on Their Rights

The Americans for Safe Access and the National Lawyers Guild will 
hold a nationally simulcasted activist boot camp training Feb. 19 and 
20 in the Wayne State Law School for medical marijuana users and advocates.

The ASA is the nation's largest organization made up of patients, 
medical professionals and advocates for the therapeutic use of 
marijuana, said Brandy Zink of the ASA.

Zink said the goal of the training is to organize and mobilize 
advocates and to inform people of their rights.

"Patients are being trampled on all over the state," Zink said.

Zink said the Michigan Department of Community Health has done a poor 
job of issuing permanent carrying cards within 20 days.

What happens, she said, is patients are being pulled over and 
arrested because they don't have their plastic cards on them. And 
police aren't accepting the temporary paperwork despite the language 
on the paperwork telling them to do so, Zink said.

"Patients are being arrested every day," she said. "Hundreds, if not 
thousands, are being wrongfully arrested."

Since the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act was passed in 2008, several 
cities and townships have tried to circumvent state law and ban 
medical marijuana with local ordinances.

"The Michigan Medical Marijuana Act clearly permits patients with 
state-issued medical marijuana cards to take marijuana to treat their 
illnesses," Michael J Steinberg, legal director of the American Civil 
Liberties Union of Michigan, wrote in an e-mail.

"While every law is subject to interpretation, cities that make any 
use or possession of medical marijuana a crime are thumbing their 
nose at state law and Michigan voters who overwhelmingly approved the 
law in 2008."

The ACLU currently is involved in pending lawsuits with Livonia, 
Wyoming, Bloomfield Hills and Birmingham, "because they have enacted 
ordinances banning medical marijuana within their cities," Steinberg said.

On the other side, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said 
earlier in February on Grand Rapids' WOOD TV8, the act is "exploited 
by those who really are making a mockery of laws across Michigan." He 
went on to say the law is "loosely written" and taken advantage of by 
those pushing for complete marijuana legalization.

The activist training will take place both days from 9:30 a.m. to 
5:30 p.m. at the Law Classroom Building, room 1525, and is set to 
involve thousands from across the nation, Zink said. There are only 
two locations in Michigan: WSU and Gulliver.

Zink said it is the first time ASA has done this type of training and 
decided to link up with the NLG after attending a symposium on 
medical marijuana the guild sponsored two years ago.

The NLG began in Detroit in 1937. It is an organization "dedicated to 
the need for basic change in the structure of our political and 
economic system," according to the website. Its members - both 
attorneys and students - often are seen at progressive rallies or 
demonstrations wearing neon-green caps as legal observers.  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake