Pubdate: Wed, 15 Jun 2011 Source: Times Herald, The (Port Huron, MI) Copyright: 2011 The Times Herald Contact: http://www.thetimesherald.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.thetimesherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2570 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MARIJUANA LAW NEEDS ADJUSTMENT Say what you will about Michigan's Medical Marihuana Act, but one point is beyond dispute: The industry it spawned is a moneymaker -- and a source of new revenue to state government. Two years after the law took effect, medical marijuana has made more than an $8 million profit, according to a new study from the state Medical Marihuana Program. The industry grossed almost $9.7 million, and $1.5 million of its expenses went to licensing marijuana patients and their caregivers. It's ironic that this expanding new industry and the needed revenue it is providing to the coffers of state government is fraught with so many problems. The Michigan Medical Marihuana Act is a contradiction. State voters approved medical marijuana use in 2008. More than two and half years later, how the drug is used and where it can be sold is anybody's guess. Growers and sellers run the risk of arrest. Law enforcement agencies believe the medical law shields drug dealing. Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper said 100 people have been charged with dealing drugs under the guise of medical-marijuana sales and distribution since the law took effect. State Attorney General Bill Schuette said the law "has nothing about authorizing dispensaries." The state is unable to keep up with the demand for registering medical marijuana users. Ten full-time employees in the state Department of Community Health simply aren't enough to process 550 applications a day from Michigan residents seeking permits to use or grow the drug. Municipalities coping with the law's gray areas are opting for moratoriums on medical marijuana centers in the absence of clarity about how they can zone and manage the businesses. Surely Michigan's lawmakers can take a hard look at the medical marijuana law and make some overdue adjustments. Legislation must clarify who can grow and dispense marijuana and where. It must keep convicted drug felons from growing or selling marijuana and it must designate where the drug can be grown. It must provide zoning standards that affirm the right of municipalities to determine where dispensaries can operate. Doing business near a school, for example, should not be allowed. Provisions must be created to protect lawful users, dispensers and growers from police harassment. If their permits are in order, they should be able to consume, sell or grow the drug without fear of arrest. It is obvious by now that medical marijuana is an expanding industry. The state should treat it as such. Some of the revenue government has received clearly must go to hiring more workers to process use and cultivation applications. Medical marijuana is part of Michigan's future. State voters have seen to that. State lawmakers must make the law workable. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom