Pubdate: Mon, 24 Jun 2013 Source: Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ) Copyright: 2013 Newark Morning Ledger Co Contact: http://www.nj.com/starledger/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424 Author: Susan K. Livio BILL MAKING MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROGRAM MORE ACCESSIBLE TO SICK KIDS WINS FINAL PASSAGE TRENTON - As the mothers of two chronically sick children cried tears of relief, the Assembly approved a bill today that would remove some of the legal barriers that have prevented kids from benefiting from New Jersey's medicinal marijuana program. The 55-13 vote with nine abstentions in the Assembly was the bill's last stop before going to Gov. Chris Christie, who has reluctantly implemented the medical marijuana law and has said he is "not inclined to allow" children to participate in the program, even though state law allows it. Meghan Wilson of Scotch Plains and Jennie Stormes of Hope Township, who sat in the back of the Assembly chamber awaiting the vote, said they hoped the governor would keep an open mind for the sake of their children and other families caring for a child with a debilitating illness. "I hope he can put on his Dad hat for a few minutes and read this with a human heart, and think about what he would do if he was in this situation," Wilson said. Assemblywoman Linda Stender and Sen. Nicholas Scutari (both D-Union) sponsored the bill on behalf of Meghan and Brian Wilson's 2-year-old daughter, Vivian, who is diagnosed with Dravet syndrome, a severe and potentially lethal form of epilepsy. The toddler's parents say they are eager to find a strain of marijuana that is successfully preventing seizures in children with Dravet in Colorado and California, but claim New Jersey's medicinal marijuana rules are too restrictive to permit them from exploring that option. State law requires minors who qualify for the medical pot program not only to obtain a referral from a treating physician, but also to get letters of support from a pediatrician and a psychiatrist -- something the Wilsons were unable to accomplish until they went public with their story last month in The Star-Ledger. The bill would require parents to obtain one recommendation from the child's treating doctor only, and allow dispensaries to grow more than three strains of marijuana and sell it in edible form -- conditions that state rules now forbid. Wilson was accompanied to the statehouse by Stormes, whose 14-year-old son, Jackson, has the same illness as Vivian and has had trouble getting access to medicinal marijuana. Stormes said she knows the drug will help her son; he lives part-time with his father in California where he is also a registered patient, and has had fewer and shorter seizures after using medicinal marijuana. "I hope Governor Christie. . . thinks of his children. If they were having seizures every day, he would vote yes," Stormes said. If signed into law, the bill means "I can finally treat my son. This is his whole future. The drugs have failed. There is nothing left. He really needs this." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt