Pubdate: Wed, 24 Jul 2013 Source: Telegraph, The (Nashua, NH) Copyright: 2013 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 Author: David Brooks Cannabis Care NEW HAMPSHIRE MEDICAL MARIJUANA REGULATORS URGED TO LEARN FROM NEW JERSEY'S FAILURES Editor's note: New Hampshire is the 19th state to allow some form of medical marijuana. The Telegraph's six-day series, Cannabis Care, examines New Hampshire's therapeutic marijuana legislation and how the law will work, including who can get the drug, how much it will cost, and what needs to happen before the first batch of marijuana is legally distributed in the state. It sounds simple: Legalize therapeutic marijuana, create some dispensaries that grow it and sell it on doctors' orders, and you're done. Or maybe not. Consider New Jersey, which passed a law similar to New Hampshire's medical-marijuana law in 2010 but currently has zero functioning dispensaries, and only about 200 patients who have received cannabis in a state seven times the size of New Hampshire. "Our system slid from dysfunctional to total failure," said Ken Wolski, who has been advocating for medical marijuana in New Jersey for a decade. He heads a 10-year-old nonprofit called The Coalition of Medical Marijuana-New Jersey. The fact is, he said, that when it comes to implementing laws, the devil is in the details, and the details are in the regulations. "I was a state employee for 25 years, and I'm well aware of the importance of regulations in making a workable program," Wolski said. In January 2010, the New Jersey Legislature passed and the governor signed a medical marijuana law that, like New Hampshire's, established a few state-controlled dispensaries (six of them; New Hampshire will have four), established a limited number of diseases that qualify for cannabis treatment, limited strains of cannabis that can be sold and forbids growing marijuana outside dispensaries. That left a lot of details to be filled in by regulations. Whether deliberately (as Wolski said he suspects) or inadvertently, the regulations drawn up by the administration of Gov. Chris Christie, who was elected shortly after the medical-pot law passed and has never been a big fan of it, have throttled implementation. As an example, Wolski pointed out that patients sign up for a statewide register in order to get pot, while physicians must sign up for a separate register before they can certify that somebody has a disease that qualifies for pot. (As in New Hampshire and other medical-marijuana states, doctors don't write actual prescriptions for dope.) "It established a series of hoops that doctors have to go through to register, and only a couple hundred have done so out of 30,000 in the state," Wolski said. "That makes it very, very difficult for a patient to find a doctor. It's supposed to be a bona fide doctor-patient relationship, but they have to search for a doctor, and it might be an OB-GYN if they have a neurological syndrome." Christie has supported the requirement as necessary to keep a lid on this new area of medical treatment, saying in one public speech: "I am not going to turn this into a place where people fly into Newark airport, drive someplace, claim to have a migraine from a quack doctor and get high." Another difficulty is creating dispensaries. Only one New Jersey dispensary has opened so far and, after serving about 200 patients, it was closed as of July either because of overwhelming demand or quality-control issues, depending on which reports you believe. Another dispensary is supposed to open this fall, but the phone number it lists on its website has been disconnected. A couple of issues have combined to this lack. One is that many communities are reluctant to allow marijuana dispensaries out of concern that they will morph into "head shops" and attract undesirable crowds. This is likely to be an issue in New Hampshire, as well, since some towns are comparing dispensaries to strip clubs, which can be disallowed by a town's zoning. Another is state regulations. "The alternative treatment centers are regulated more strictly than full-service pharmacies are regulated," Wolski said. Wolski also cited limits on the percentage of THC, the important active ingredient in cannabis, to 10 percent, and the fact that therapeutic marijuana is subject to state tax, unusual for a medicine. "The result is an inferior medicine, of limited variety, at very high expense," he said, estimating cost of around $140 per quarter ounce, plus tax. "No wonder it's having problems." Wolski said he wasn't optimistic that things would change anytime soon, noting that Christie is extremely popular and likely to be re-elected this year. "I want to caution New Hampshire as it proceeds," he said. "If they want to make a meaningful program, consistent with the intent of helping people, they need to have some people who actually understand how marijuana works ... when drawing up regulations. Otherwise, it will fail." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom