Pubdate: Mon, 04 Apr 2011 Source: Bozeman Daily Chronicle (MT) Copyright: 2011 The Bozeman Daily Chronicle Contact: http://bozemandailychronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1686 STAKES HIGH IF LAWMAKERS FAIL TO ACT ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA Montana lawmakers are on the brink of kicking the medical marijuana can down the road for yet another two years. And that would be an egregious disservice to their constituents. State senators earlier this week quibbled over a financial estimate for implementing a proposed medical-marijuana regulation bill until they passed a procedural deadline for the measure. Now senators are trying to send a badly butchered version of the bill to the House, along with a competing measure to repeal the medical marijuana initiative altogether. Any effort to pass a regulation bill in the House faces tough sledding, given that some lawmakers have made it known they will vote for nothing short of repeal of the state's 7-year-old, voter-approved medical-marijuana law - a move Gov. Brian Schweitzer is hinting he might veto. The stakes are high. If lawmakers fail at this task, we could be looking at an even wider spread abuse of the law over the next couple of years. Some estimates indicated Senate Bill 423 would have cut the number of Montana medical marijuana users from an estimated 28,000 today to some 2,000. Some Democrats argued the bill was too restrictive and would have blocked access to the drug for some legitimate users. Some legislators say they favor putting the repeal of the 2004 initiative to the voters yet again. In the same breath, they predict voters will reject repeal, leaving the industry to flourish unregulated yet again. Voters approved the medical-marijuana law by a two-to-one margin and let it be known loud and clear that they favored allowing its use in legitimate cases. But the necessarily abbreviated nature of ballot initiatives could not include any details on how the drugs production and distribution would be regulated. That job fell to lawmakers who are now on the verge of failing to act for the fourth regular session of Legislature. The impasse is indicative of just how divisive and dysfunctional state government has become. A little give on the part of both sides of the issue could still produce some passable legislation that certainly would be better than nothing. Let's see something in Helena we haven't seen much of for awhile: statesmanship. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.