Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 Source: Statesman Journal (Salem, OR) Copyright: 2011 Statesman Journal Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/QEzJupzz Website: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/427 Authors: Jeff Barnard and Jonathan J. Cooper MEASURE RAISES POT CARD FEES The Increase From $100 to $200 Could Take Effect July 1 Oregon lawmakers are considering whether to tap the medical marijuana program to fund other health programs. This past week the joint Ways and Means Committee approved doubling the $100 annual fee for medical marijuana cardholders, and imposing a new $200 fee on growers who are not already patients. The estimated $7 million raised would go to other programs within the cash-strapped Oregon Health Authority, including clean water, emergency medical care and school health centers. The issue, found in a budget bill for the OHA, now heads to the full House. If the measure gains approval as part of the budget, the fee increases go into effect July 1. Meanwhile, several bills aimed at making it much tougher for people to get a medical marijuana card have apparently died. With law enforcement agencies decrying medical marijuana as out of control, the Legislature saw more than a dozen bills aimed at reining in one aspect or another of the program. Eventually, a team of three former state troopers came up with a bill that would have made it virtually impossible for doctors to prescribe the drug. The bill was relegated to a quiet death in committee. Rep. Andy Olson, R-Albany, a former state police lieutenant, said their bill was dead, but he plans to bring back a bill next year. Rep. Tim Freeman, R-Roseburg, said he wouldn't call the medical marijuana program a cash cow, but acknowledged that the additional revenue is being used to subsidize unrelated services. Freeman said Gov. John Kitzhaber's recommended budget left a large hole in public health funding. The Oregon Health Authority had already planned to increase fees in the medical marijuana program but decided to hike them even higher to help fill the budget gap. The fee increases came out of the governor's direction that some health programs that received general fund revenue in the past would have to find fee revenue instead, said Barry Kast, interim director of the Office of Community Health, which includes the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program. As of April, nearly 40,000 Oregonians held patient cards at $100 apiece, raising about $4 million a year. Separate legislation would charge patients $10 to replace a lost card. Medical marijuana advocates decry the idea of a fee increase as an unfair tax on some of Oregon's poorest citizens. "We managed to escape, I thought, without any changes to the program," said Bob Wolfe, of the Oregon Marijuana Policy Initiative. "All of a sudden, out of nowhere, we get this stealth tax on the poorest people in Oregon." But Paul Stanford, who owns a chain of medical marijuana clinics and is gathering signatures for a marijuana legalization initiative for the 2012 ballot, said the budget measure bodes well for eventual legalization of marijuana. He estimated that taxing it could raise $150 million a year. Morgan Fox, communications manager for the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C., said Oregon was following in the footsteps of states like Colorado and Vermont, which have gradually been making medical marijuana more accessible and putting it under more state control. "If we are willing to realize it is legitimate to tax patients to fund social programs, we should be willing to see it is legitimate enough to open it up as an industry." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.