Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jun 2011 Source: Grand Forks Gazette (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Black Press Contact: http://www.bclocalnews.com/kootenay_rockies/grandforksgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/525 Author: Karl Yu, Grand Forks Gazette RDKB SUPPORTS MEDICINAL MARIJUANA PILOT PROJECT IN PRINCIPLE The Regional District of Kootenay Boundary (RDKB) has agreed to support in principle a project involving marijuana. At an RDKB board meeting last Thursday, Grand Forks Compassionate Society (GFCS) Executive Director Jim Leslie made a presentation on medicinal marijuana and the directors voted in favour of sending a letter supporting the pilot project in principle. Currently, access to medicinal marijuana is granted by Health Canada but recently Minister of Health Leona Aglukkaq made recommendations to improve the Marijuana Medical Access Program in order to curb abuse and exploitation by criminals. Joy Davies, city councillor and chair of the GFCS, said there are problems with the current system. "The major problem is patients that are under their doctors' care cannot access safe, local, legal, dignified cannabis and with the system as it is, patients can't grow their cannabis until they are approved by Health Canada, which could take up to six months," Davies said. GFCS would like to see control of medicinal marijuana change hands from the federal to provincial government, something Leslie said is the direction Health Canada is going in with its recommended changes. "Basically, we are looking to advance a decentralized medical marijuana access program from the federal government to the province of B.C., or the provinces generally," explained Leslie. "That's actually a direction Health Canada is going in according to proposed changes to the regulations they've released. There's nothing laid out specifically by Health Canada at this time but we're concerned about centralized production and there're some negative impacts to local communities economically and also to the patients for access and quality of product." Leslie said that there are jobs that could be created in local economies with regulated, licensed, regional production systems and doesn't want to see small towns take any more economic hits. He said that with a resource-based economy it's been tough and the pilot project could be something that is used in communities to produce medicine that helps a number of Canadians. There could be some backlash but members of the board are aware that the topic is a controversial one. "It's a fact that (marijuana) is being used (as legal medicine in Canada), we can't deny it; doctors are issuing prescriptions for patients to have access to it," explained Midway Director and Board Chair Marguerite Rotvold, adding she gained better insight into medicinal marijuana thanks to Leslie. "The presentation gave me a clearer vision of medicinal marijuana because it's so broad - creams, tinctures, all the different processes you can go through, not just smoking. It's less smoking probably than it is all these other processes, so I was willing to support it in principle." Montrose Director Griff Welsh said that while it was hard to determine the definition of what is legal and what is illegal, when it comes to growing marijuana, he did seem impressed with the presentation. "Your proposal sounds legitimate and honest and forthright and seems to be the way to do it," he said at the meeting. Leslie said support in principle from the RDKB is big. "It's a huge step forward," Leslie said. "I think what that shows is local government realizes that the (current medical marijuana access) program isn't working very well right now and it hasn't for quite a while - it's been very hard to work through and this is a way to streamline it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.