Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jun 2014 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2014 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Dan Boyd Page: C1 MEDICAL POT RULE CHANGES CRITICIZED Producers, Patients Testify Program Would Be Crippled SANTA FE - Patients and producers in New Mexico's 7- year-old medical marijuana program lined up Monday to criticize - in sometimes heated tones - new fees and other proposed program changes. About 500 people took turns packing a Department of Health auditorium for a public hearing on the proposed rule changes, some holding signs emblazoned with messages like "Being sick is not a crime." About 175 testified. Producers and patients, many of whom described themselves as military veterans, said the proposed changes would cripple the medical marijuana program by making it more difficult to obtain medical pot. "This is about compassion," said Debbie Armstrong, the former Cabinet secretary of the state Aging and Long-term Services Department. "It's about access to medicine that works for people." Armstrong's daughter, Erin, a cancer survivor, was one of the namesakes of the 2007 "Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act," which created the state's medical pot program. Meanwhile, Sen. Cisco McSorley, D- Albuquerque, the sponsor of that legislation - there are now 22 states with such programs - blasted the Department of Health's rule-making process. Specifically, McSorley questioned how the agency would use the money generated from new fees and the transparency of its rule-making process. He also claimed the proposed rule changes are an attempt to "destroy" the medical cannabis program. "The department wrote these regulations without listening to the public," McSorley said to loud applause. The Department of Health unveiled the proposed changes earlier this year, after commissioning a survey of licensed New Mexico producers and patients. Among other things, the proposals include a first-ever fee of $ 50 a year for approved patients to renew their registry ID cards. Although the rules would relax restrictions on how many pot plants could be grown, nonprofit producers would have to pay an increased fee if they chose to ramp up their production levels. The agency, which has insisted the proposed regulations are intended to expand the supply of medical marijuana, is also proposing to implement criminal background checks for qualified patients who wish to grow their own medical marijuana - but not for other patients. A decision on whether to adopt, reject or tweak the proposed rules is expected to come after the hearing officer who ran Monday's hearing makes a report to Health Secretary Retta Ward The agency will also consider written comments submitted before a July 1 deadline. DOH spokesman Kenny Vigil said Monday that there is no deadline for a decision on the proposed changes. Currently, there are 11,237 patients enrolled in the state's program and 23 licensed medical marijuana producers, according to the Department of Health. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom