Pubdate: Wed, 16 Oct 2013
Source: Seattle Weekly (WA)
Column: Toke Signals
Copyright: 2013 Village Voice Media
Contact: 
http://www.seattleweekly.com/feedback/EmailAnEmployee?department=letters
Website: http://www.seattleweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/410
Author: Steve Elliott

YOU'RE PUTTING WHOM IN CHARGE?

Last fall during the political battle over Initiative 502-the 
recreational-marijuana legalization measure which ended up being 
approved by Washington state voters-proponents of the measure 
repeated, early and often, that medical marijuana would remain 
separate from and unaffected by recreational legalization.

Luminaries such as I-502's chief author, Alison Holcomb, and Keith 
Henson of Washington NORML assured the patient community that 
patients had nothing to worry about-the safe access of patients, 
which was ensured by a dual system of home grows (of up to 15 plants) 
and storefront access points, would not be impacted.

Now, in a textbook case of just how disingenuous political statements 
can be, both Holcomb and Henson are shamelessly engaging in 
doublespeak. Now they claim medical-marijuana dispensaries were 
always illegal to begin with, so the plans of former narcotics cop 
Rep. Christopher Hurst to shut down all shops really don't represent 
a "change" for medical-marijuana patients.

Umm . . . OK. Try explaining that to the patients who will no longer 
be able to safely access the particular medicinal strains they 
need-or to afford the overtaxed pot which will be offered in state 
502 stores. (Do you really think stores aiming at the 
lowest-common-denominator recreational market will stock, say, 
high-CBD weed, which is great for pain and inflammation but doesn't 
get you high? Dream on.)

 From some of the rhetoric heard lately, both in our legislature from 
Rep. Hurst and even from Gov. Jay Inslee, you'd think that the entire 
medical-marijuana thing was a black-market enterprise. You'd have 
trouble even discerning that a medical-marijuana law-approved by an 
overwhelming majority of voters-has been in place and functional for 
15 years now in this state. And you'd have a really difficult time 
finding out that RCW 69.51A.085 clearly allows the exchange of money 
for medical cannabis.

The real reason that the Washington State Liquor Control Board is 
being given authority over medical marijuana is to eliminate the competition.

Yep, it seems the medical-marijuana law-which has been working just 
fine for 15 years-suddenly needs to be "appropriately regulated." And 
here's the real reason: "If relatively easy access to medical 
cannabis continues, the goals and potential of Initiative 502 will be 
undermined," last week's letter from the Seattle City Council to Gov. 
Inslee reads.

That echoes "Goal 1," as outlined in a leaked official document: 
"De-incentivize medical marijuana to ensure recreational users are 
appropriately funneled into the I-502 model rather than the medical market."

How are they going to "de-incentivize medical marijuana"? By reducing 
allowed patient possession amounts from the current 24 ounces; by 
removing the affirmative defense of medical necessity for possession 
above the legal limit; and by "eliminat[ing] or reduc[ing] home grows."

Home grows are the only way many seriously ill and low-income 
patients can afford to use cannabis-and cannabis is the only relief 
they can find. To "eliminate or reduce home grows" sounds antiseptic 
on paper, but what it means in the real world is that some very ill 
patients won't have safe access anymore-to the only medicine that works.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom