Pubdate: Wed, 28 Dec 2011 Source: Providence Journal, The (RI) Copyright: 2011 The Providence Journal Company Contact: http://www.projo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352 Author: Philip Marcelo Medical Marijuana FOX WANTS ACTION ON DISPENSARIES House Speaker Says He'll Petition Federal Government to See What State Needs to Do PROVIDENCE ---- House Speaker Gordon D. Fox says he'll personally petition the U.S. Department of Justice to seek a way for Rhode Island to open the medical marijuana dispensaries that advocates have long sought. "I plan on going to the federal government to ask them: what do you need it to look like?" the Providence Democrat said Tuesday. "Because I think it's been too long and there have been too many people waiting. ... I hear so many stories of people waiting for relief and they are not being addressed. They deserve better than that." Earlier this year, Governor Chafee halted the process of issuing the state's first dispensary operating licenses, following a warning from the Justice Department that the facilities might violate federal law. Later Chafee said he would petition, along with Washing-ton Gov. Christine Gregoire, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration to reclassify marijuana so it can be sold as a physician-prescribed drug. He also said he would work with the legislature to scale back the size of the proposed dispensaries. Fox says the governor's office has not yet presented Assembly leaders with such a plan. He believes that the administration can potentially address the federal government's concerns through the rulemaking process, which falls under the auspices of executive branch agencies rather than the state legislature. "If it is about volume of business, or whatever, I think you can come up with some rules, and you don't have to come to the legislature saying, 'This is what you have to do'," Fox said. Like advocates, he believes that large-scale, state-regulated facilities where marijuana is grown and sold are preferable to the current system, which allows medical marijuana patients to either grow their own marijuana or purchase the drug from "caregivers" licensed to sell and grow limited quantities of it. Fox argues that the federal government has lately been sending "mixed signals" about its stance on the medical marijuana dispensaries, which are also referred to as "compassion centers." Under federal law, marijuana is a Schedule 1 Controlled Substance, or drug, with no medicinal value. Anyone operating a dispensary, therefore, could be charged with running large-scale drug operations. But Fox says that while individual U.S. Attorneys have issued warnings to state officials, their boss, U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., has told Congress that his department would not crackdown on government-approved dispensaries if they met certain legal requirements. And Fox says that in California, a recent federal deadline to shut down dispensaries has come and gone. "It is like, what's really going on here?" - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom