Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jan 2012 Source: Today's News-Herald (Lake Havasu City, AZ) Copyright: 2012 Today's News-Herald Contact: http://www.havasunews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5231 STATE MUST REGAIN CONTROL OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA The jury will be out for a long time on whether Arizona can develop a world-best medical marijuana system, but at least two judges have ruled that state government messed up the process. When the second judicial ruling came last week, Gov. Jan Brewer had already said the state would begin to accept and issue marijuana dispensary licenses, a key component of the program approved by voters in 2010. The second decision, from a Maricopa County Superior Court Judge, said Brewer illegally delayed implementation of the law. This is a controversial law. It was approved by the slimmest of margins. Many believe it is a steppingstone law toward outright legalization of the drug. In that context, opposition by Brewer and many others is understandable. What makes no sense, though, is implementing only a portion of the law. Half-baked, so to speak, as the law is now, thousands of people can legally possess and grow marijuana. Once dispensaries are established, only those medical card holders who live more than 25 miles from a dispensary may grow their own. But the decision to issue dispensary licenses is not the only hurdle to implementing a law designed to be more restrictive and regulated than other medical marijuana states. A big part of the picture rests with physicians and their regulating organizations. Medical regulators are already questioning the number of marijuana recommendations written by a small number of physicians, suggesting that quick clinic visits do not satisfy the letter of Arizona's law. Yet many mainstream physicians wrestle with the new law. First off, there are no governmental purity standards for marijuana as exist for FDA-approved drugs and interactions with prescription medications are imprecisely known. Then there are the governmental hoops and at least a thought that discipline awaits those who don't follow the rules precisely. As of last week, a state House bill that authorizes health department marijuana program officials to notify the physician licensing board about physicians' marijuana recommendations cleared a committee. Such provisions are already authorized, so the legislation only makes a point to underscore that regulators are watching. This will dissuade mainsteam physicians from recommending marijuana and improve business for the marijuana clinics. Voters approved a medical marijuana law for Arizona that is the most-regulated in the country. With so many loose ends, the law is the opposite of restrictive. It's time for the state to follow the letter of the law and regain control of medical marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt