Pubdate: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 Source: Daily Tribune, The (MN) Copyright: 2014 The Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.hibbingmn.com/placed/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2563 Author: Katie G. Nelson, Legislative Correspondent Cited: Minnesotans for Compassionate Care http://www.mncares.org/ GOVERNOR URGED TO RETHINK MEDICINAL MARIJUANA BILL ST. PAUL -- DFL Rep. Carly Melin of Hibbing and city resident Angie Weaver urged Gov. Mark Dayton to give seriously ill Minnesotans access to medicinal marijuana during a Wednesday afternoon press conference. Melin made an impromptu speech during the meeting imploring the governor to rethink his stance about legalizing medical marijuana in Minnesota. Melin authored a bill to legalize medical marijuana but has received strong opposition from Dayton and lawmakers throughout the session. "I know Gov. Dayton personally and he is a very compassionate person," said Melin while fighting back tears. "I think that he can change his mind and change his approach and we can get something done that is going to result in getting these families what they need." Dayton has been under fire since Tuesday after making comments insinuating that medical marijuana advocates wanted to legalize cannabis in order to smoke it. Dayton later apologized for those comments. "My comment yesterday, to which I referred to 'the advocates who want to legalize medical marijuana and be able to smoke marijuana plants and leaves...' was in no way intended to refer to victims of terrible diseases or their parents, who I was trying to help," Dayton said in a statement. "I regret that my words were unclear." Advocates called Dayton's recent remarks "absolutely ridiculous" and "disgusting." "The comments the governor has made after this meeting have been hard for us to hear. We have been accused of blocking research that would help hundreds of kids. We have been accused of nothing more than wanting to smoke marijuana recreationally," said Heather Azzi of Minnesotans for Compassionate Care. Throughout this session, Dayton has opposed bills that fully legalize medical marijuana in Minnesota while remaining particularly hard-lined on allowing smokable forms of cannabis. Dayton last week did propose a $2.2 million research study of CBD (a component of cannabis that doesn't have psychotropic properties) for children with epilepsy, but that compromise was rejected. On Wednesday, advocates said that funding limited research studies for just a few hundred patients just wasn't enough. "To me, I'm not going to have my daughter wait two to five more years to get medicine to get help when we know it's working other places," said Weaver, whose daughter suffers from a severe form of epilepsy. Weaver said she plans on moving from Hibbing to Colorado, where marijuana is legal, if Melin's bill doesn't pass this session Jessica Hauser said she is facing a similar move with her family because of her child's medical condition. And though she was invited to Dayton's residence in early March to talk about legalizing medical marijuana, Hauser said several comments by Dayton indicated that he didn't understand the gravity of the situation. Stating "the governor actually suggested that I should just find medical marijuana off the street," Hauser added, "To tell the truth, I was shocked and appalled that he would say that to me after hearing my son's story. Minnesotans with debilitating medical conditions and their families should not have to take on the added stress of breaking the law to get a medicine that could help them. They should not take a backseat to politics." Dayton later responded to Hauser's claim stating, "I cannot, and I do not, advocate breaking the law. But as a father, I understand parents who would do anything possible to help their children." For Weaver, who called Dayton's comments "offensive" and untrue, it seems as if the prospects of passing a bill are becoming dimmer with every trip she makes to the Capitol. "I don't know what's going to happen," Weaver said. "Amelia's been having a very tough time, so it's been hard to maintain her health at home, family life and fight this fight as well. It's been exhausting lately, but we want to give it our all." Melin said she was also giving her best effort to pass the medical marijuana bill, which is currently stalled in committees. Melin's bill, which was recently modified to prohibit smoking or growing marijuana as well as adding seed and plant tracking systems, would legalize medical marijuana for patients with serious medical conditions such as cancer, HIV/AIDS, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and conditions causing seizures or intractable pain. Melin said that hearing the stories of these families has taken an emotional toll on her but she's still confident that there are enough votes in the House and the Senate to pass her bill, if the governor backs it, too. "We have tremendous amount of support from the Legislature," Melin said. Rep. Andrea Kieffer, R-Woodbury, voiced similar opinions during the press conference while also pressing Dayton to rethink his stance. "I think the votes are here and politically speaking, Gov. Dayton can do whatever he wants. I think this is a political thing and I think he's afraid to take this stance publicly," she said. Responding to the Wednesday afternoon press conference, Dayton said, "If advocates agree to the compromise solution my administration has proposed -- which I believe would provide their children with the medication and relief they need as quickly as possible -- then something can be accomplished on this issue this session." Dayton's proposal would fund a $2.2 million clinical trial that would allow about 200 children to have access to CBD. The trial would take between six and eight months before beginning and would last between three and five years. Some children would be placed on a placebo drug during the trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom