Pubdate: Fri, 17 Feb 2012 Source: Sammamish Review (WA) Copyright: {2011} Sammamish Review Contact: http://sammamishreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5274 Author: Caleb Heeringa SAMMAMISH URGES REDUCING MARIJUANA'S CLASSIFICATION The Sammamish City Council threw their support behind Gov. Chris Gregoire's push to have the federal government reclassify marijuana -- a potential step forward for its medical use. By a 6-1 vote, the council voted to have Mayor Tom Odell sign a letter prepared by the Association of Washington Cities supporting the reclassification of marijuana as a "Schedule II" drug, meaning it has accepted medicinal uses. The federal government currently classifies it as a "Schedule I" drug, without medicinal value and on par with heroin and LSD. Moving the drug down the ladder would be a win for the state's medical marijuana law, passed by initiative in 1998 and augmented by the state legislature over the years. Medical marijuana users and cities are currently in legal limbo between state and federal law. Sammamish has instituted a moratorium on collective gardens -- designated cooperatives that grow and dispense the drug to licensed users. City staff share Gregoire's concerns that employees who process an application for a collective garden could be held liable under federal law. Odell agreed to sign the letter as a member of the council, though he was the lone dissenting vote on the matter. Odell said he believed marijuana use was a "precursor" to harder drugs and that moving the drug down the Drug Enforcement Agency's ladder might increase the momentum towards legalization. He said the matter hit close to home for his family. "Personally, I'm struggling with this," he said. "I had a cousin who started off using marijuana and ended up on LSD and he fried his brain. As a consequence he was in and out of mental hospitals for most of his life. That's a load not only on families but on society in general." Schedule II drugs include many pharmaceuticals and pain killers that are heavily regulated and only available by prescription, such as morphine, oxycodone, Adderall and Ritalin. The Association of Washington Cities letter supports marijuana being dispensed by pharmacies in a similar fashion. The council's discussion drifted to its own ban on collective gardens, which extends into July. Issaquah and several other cities in the region have set up licensing and zoning regulations for the gardens. Though there have not yet been any applications for the gardens in the city, Police Chief Nate Elledge said he was opposed to opening the door to them in the future. "The question is do we as a council or a city, if we approve aE& collective gardens are we sending the message to our youth that marijuana use is okay," Elledge said. "I'm very conservative in my views on this and I believe it's important to protect our youth from easy access to anything." Deputy Mayor John James said he thought a more regulated system for getting medical marijuana to patients was better than the current unregulated system. "I'm struggling with this, but in a couple ways I can see the benefit too," he said. "Right now we have people dealing marijuana out of their homes." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt