Pubdate: Wed, 28 Sep 2011 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.newsdurhamregion.com/news/oshawa Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Author: Jillian Follert DEBATE SPARKED OVER MARIJUANA USE Region Says City Should Consider"Adverse Human Health Impacts" OSHAWA -- The burning issue of accommodation for medical marijuana users is now with the City's legal department. This summer the Oshawa Accessibility Advisory Committee asked council to look at including medical marijuana use in the City's manual on accessible customer service. The committee also wants council to formally recognize that "all citizens have the equal right to take their prescribed medication in public without fear of harassment and discrimination." OAAC chairman Derek Giberson says the issue has become a"political hot potato,"bouncing from one level of government to another as policy makers struggle with the stigma associated with pot smoking and a lack of precedent. "There is no doubt it is an accessibility issue," he said. "If someone has a disability and they're using a medication that helps them to function better and live better, the moment they have difficulty using that medication that becomes a barrier." Oshawa council sent both OAAC requests to the Region's health and social services committee, which in turn referred them to Dr. Robert Kyle, the Region's medical officer of health, and Tracey Tyner Cavanagh, the Region's accessibility co-ordinator. Letters from Dr. Kyle and Ms. Tyner Cavanagh were included in Oshawa council's Sept. 26 agenda -- and neither one is favourable towards the committee's requests. In his correspondence Dr. Kyle says Health Canada recommends medical marijuana users not consume the drug in a public place and that ingestion of medical marijuana by smoking is not recommended, because of the possible risk of lung disease. "Any proposed change of municipal law, policy and procedures to increase its access should take the adverse human health impacts as outline by Health Canada into account," his letter reads. Ms. Cavanagh says medical marijuana does not fall within the Region's customer service training program, because it is "a specific and individual treatment, which is prescribed by a doctor." Mayor John Henry says it's too early to say how Oshawa will handle the matter -- it depends what the legal department has to say. "On the one hand, if someone has a licence for medical marijuana they have obviously met the terms and should be able to have it,"the mayor noted."But we also have a bylaw when it comes to smoking and there are concerns about second-hand smoke. How do we intermix the two issues?" Legal services is expected to report back at council's Oct. 17 meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom