Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jul 2013 Source: Record, The (Troy, NY) Copyright: 2013 The Record Contact: http://www.troyrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1724 Author: Nancy Rivera Page: 10 SENSIBLE AND HUMANE Last Saturday morning, the Compassionate Care Act, a bill that would have created legal access to medical marijuana for seriously ill patients, died in the New York State Senate. As someone who has survived four bouts of cancer, I am disappointed and frustrated that the bill never came up for a vote in the Senate, leaving me and thousands of other New Yorkers who are living with serious illnesses to wait yet another year for relief. The Compassionate Care Act would have created one of the nation's most tightly regulated medical marijuana programs allowing people with debilitating conditions - such as cancer, multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, paralysis, and Parkinson's - access to a small amount of medical marijuana under the supervision of their healthcare provider. The bill has passed the Assembly four times and is supported by 82 percent of New York voters, including thousands of patients and health care practitioners across the state. I spent several days in the Capitol during the last few weeks of the legislative session talking to our leaders about why this bill is so important to me. I have had the misfortune of being diagnosed with cancer four times - twice with breast cancer and once each with colon and throat cancer. I have suffered from excruciating nausea and pain from the many chemotherapy treatments I have undergone, and during one series of chemo and radiation treatments, I lost 40 pounds in three months. I wasn't willing to break the law to obtain medical marijuana, even though I know it probably would have eased both my symptoms and made it easier for me to endure my treatment. This bill would have allowed New Yorkers, many of whom are suffering from unspeakable pain and nausea, access to a medication known to be effective and relatively safe without having to break the law. This bill has been considered every year since 1997, and 18 other states and the District of Columbia have passed medical marijuana laws. New York has had the benefit of learning from what works and doesn't work in others states and has crafted a well-regulated program that would be overseen by the state Department of Health. It is unfathomable to me that our leaders in Albany would be this callous and deny patients like me access to a medication that could relieve our pain and suffering and possibly extend our lives. Their failure to act was a blow to patients across New York. As a cancer survivor, a mother, a grandmother, and a lifelong New Yorker, I want to live in a state that puts compassion before politics. Some people who need medical marijuana won't live to see another legislative session, but hundreds of us will continue the fight for this sensible and humane legislation. Nancy Rivera Troy - --- MAP posted-by: Matt