Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 2011
Source: Daily Inter Lake, The (MT)
Copyright: 2011 The Daily Inter Lake
Contact:  http://www.dailyinterlake.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2501

ACT NOW TO REVAMP POT LAW

It's hard to predict what kind of reforms will come to pass for
Montana's medical marijuana law, but one thing is clear: The state
Legislature must pass some significant changes before its business is
done in Helena this year.

A bill to repeal the law altogether stalled in the Senate Judiciary
Committee on Monday on a 6-6 vote. Also on Monday, federal agents
executed 26 search warrants at medical marijuana dispensaries across
the state, including here in the Flathead, alleging the operations are
involved in illegal marijuana trafficking.

We'll see how those cases pan out, but law enforcement officials
contend that the loosely defined law has been exploited for
profit-driven criminal purposes, including exporting marijuana across
state lines, in addition to spawning other criminal activity.

That's because there are now 28,739 medical marijuana patients and
4,833 marijuana caregivers in the state. Many surely have legitimate
medical purposes, but obviously many don't.

Meanwhile, educators across the state have been reporting increased
marijuana use among high school students. Just this week, Glacier High
School Principal Callie Langhor sent an e-mail update regarding four
drug-related suspensions.

"At GHS, there has been an increase in marijuana and prescription pill
policy violations," she wrote. "A vast majority of student marijuana
violations are connected in some way to the misuse of the medical
marijuana law."

These types of reports simply aren't what Montanans were expecting
when they passed an initiative on medical marijuana in 2004. They
passed that initiative based on a campaign that gave an impression
there would be limited, controlled use of medical marijuana by people
with severe, if not fatal, medical problems.

That's why the Legislature must take action. The repeal bill is not
necessarily dead in committee, since it can be brought to the Senate
floor for debate with just 26 votes. But it is also not necessarily
the best solution.

Although we think you could make a case for repeal, especially as more
and more shortcomings of the voter-passed law become evident, it is
wiser for the Legislature to either amend the law or return it to the
voters to decide for themselves if they still want to retain legal
medical marijuana.

In any case, it is self-evident at this point that the Legislature
must do something. A series of other bills remain alive in the House
that are aimed at tightening the law in a fashion that would restrict
who can get and provide medical marijuana, and would also provide more
clarity for enforcing the law.

Legislators should face the problem head-on. One way or another, this
is an issue that needs to be dealt with. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.