Pubdate: Tue, 27 May 2014 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2014 Daily News, L.P. Contact: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/295 Page: 20 KEEP A LID ON IT With the state Legislature inching toward legalizing medical marijuana, absolutely tight controls are crucial. New York must not make the mistakes California did after its medical marijuana law passed by referendum in 1996. The law was so loosey-goosey that virtually anyone could grow, sell, prescribe or ingest the weed for practically any ailment, real or imagined. Predictably, the state was overrun by pot shops frequented by recreational smokers who easily obtained prescriptions from pliant "practitioners" based on most any health complaint. Worse, the burgeoning and little-regulated industry gave cover for criminal gangs to move their contraband from Mexico and elsewhere. Here, Staten Island state Sen. Diane Savino says her Compassionate Care Act, narrowly approved by the Health Committee, would impose strict regulation "from seed to sale." Her law would license no more than 20 growing operations, which would operate indoors under 24-hour security and surveillance. Each plant would be bar-coded, its every move tracked. Only patients with one of 20 "severe disabling or life-threatening" conditions (including cancer, Alzheimer's and HIV/AIDS) would be eligible. They would need permission not just from a medical professional authorized to prescribe narcotics, but also from the state Health Department. What Savino's proposal does not do, worryingly, is cap the number of retail outlets that sell the stuff. It would also give an advisory board the power to add diseases and conditions to the original 20. Finally, it lacks an expiration date - a necessary precaution in such tricky experiments. Using his authority under existing law, Gov. Cuomo has floated a plan that would allow no more than 20 hospitals to dispense pot for medical purposes. While there are legal obstacles to this approach, he's right to want a program that's limited, controlled and subject to revocation. That's what the doctor ordered when it comes to the distribution of an illegal drug as medicine. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt