Pubdate: Thu, 07 Jul 2011 Source: Saginaw News (MI) Copyright: 2011 The Saginaw News Contact: http://www.mlive.com/mailforms/sanews/letters/index.ssf/ Website: http://www.mlive.com/saginaw/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/377 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW NEEDS CLARIFICATION, NOT NEW RESTRICTIONS There's no doubt about it, the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act needs clear rules from Lansing to blow away the haze surrounding it. But "Dr. Bob," Dr. Robert Townsend of Clare, may be right when he says a package of eight bills in the Legislature is the wrong way to do it. Sixty-three percent of Michigan voters in November 2008 approved an initiative legalizing the medical use of marijuana in Michigan. The act specified that the state Department of Community Health write administrative rules making the voters' wishes work. That has happened only to a limited degree. The health department did set up a registry so patients could, under Michigan law, carry cards saying they may legally possess, grow and use limited amounts of medical marijuana. But neither the act nor the health department said just how patients could legally get this drug, except from a registered caregiver, or lawfully obtain the seeds to grow it. So, we're left with the state, local governments, doctors, police and patients stumbling around the overly vague law, and a slew of medical marijuana dispensaries popping up across the state to provide registered medical marijuana patients with the drug. These dispensaries exist within the cloud of uncertainty around the law. Nothing in state law or state rules specifically allows them to operate. The act only states that a registered caregiver may grow up to six plants each for up to five patients, and receive compensation for the cost of the work. Michigan's medical marijuana patients need clarification on how they may get their drug. They should not have to rely on a wink from authorities, who today may ignore dispensaries, and tomorrow raid them and shut them down. And they should not be forced into constraints outlined among eight bills introduced in the Legislature. One of the proposals would require patients to get their medical marijuana certification from a "traditional" doctor-patient relationship. If a patient's doctor refuses to prescribe marijuana, that provision would shut him off from a drug that voters have OK'd for medical use. It's why patients seek out professionals like Dr. Bob, who examine their medical records, see them in person, and will prescribe what they view as a legitimate treatment for pain and nausea. What is a "traditional" medical relationship, anyway? Does that count people who rely on walk-in medical clinics for their medical care? What about poor people who don't go to any doctor regularly, but may see one only in an emergency room, when their pain, for example, becomes unbearable? It is not Lansing's job to shut any person out of access to a drug that Michigan voters have legalized for diagnosed conditions. Dr. Bob warns that some legislators are seeking to take away patients' access to marijuana. That should not happen. But we do encourage lawmakers to better enable all Michiganders to live with the Medical Marijuana Act. Define how and where patients may legally get their marijuana, and the seeds to grow it. The role of these dispensaries needs to be cleared up. Are they legal or not? State law should protect doctors who prescribe marijuana from pressure that their professional associations, affiliated clinics and hospitals and law enforcement personnel may bring to prevent the practice. Finally, marijuana growing operations need some very clear rules. Police all across the state and here in Saginaw County have raided quite a few because seedlings may be counted as full-fledged plants or marijuana is found growing in locations that police may not consider "enclosed" or "secure" enough. Government, law enforcement, doctors, patients and caregivers need to know what is right under the law. Lansing should enable the will of Michigan voters with clear rules, not bury medical marijuana under an avalanche of unreasonable restrictions. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom