Pubdate: Mon, 25 Aug 2014 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2014 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Author: Henrietta Cook Page: 3 LABOR WILL PURSUE CANNABIS REFORM Medical cannabis will be legalised in Victoria if Labor seizes power at November's state election. Under the proposal, Victorians with terminal illnesses or life threatening conditions such as cancer, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis would be able to access medicinal marijuana without breaking the law. Opposition leader Daniel Andrews said on Sunday that Labor would overhaul "outdated" legislation that forced parents to flout laws in order to save their children's lives. " We're talking about a medication to make people better, to improve quality of life, to provide dignity and pain relief, nothing more, nothing less," Mr Andrews said. Labor pledged that if it won the November election it would seek advice from the Victorian Law Reform Commission on ways of decriminalising the use of medical cannabis. The commission will also be asked to create a regulatory framework by next August, with Labor hoping to have legislation before Parliament by the end of 2015. Mr Andrews was joined by the O'Connell family, including nine-year- old Tara, who has Dravet syndrome and suffered more than 100 life- threatening seizures a day before she started taking medical cannabis in 2012. She has not had a seizure since she was treated with cannabis oil, which she sources from NSW. Mr Andrews stressed that Labor would not legalise the recreational use of marijuana or smoking marijuana for medical reasons, and said cannabis should only be available for sick people in "exceptional circumstances". " Children are in pain, families are suffering, people are living in fear, and outdated laws are getting in the way," Mr Andrews said. The move follows a number of public campaigns by Victorian families. Tara's mother Cheri O'Connell said Labor's proposal meant she could keep her daughter alive without the constant threat of child protection authorities and police knocking on her door. " Every day we give a dose and we don't know if someone is going to come knocking," Ms O'Connell said. She said there were about 30 families in Victoria using medical cannabis and some parents were growing the marijuana themselves. " That scares me. We need a framework so we can walk into a chemist and pick up a script," she said. Just three weeks ago, a Labor spokesman told The Age that the party had no plans to legalise medical cannabis. But Mr Andrews said sitting down with Tara and "a lot of other research" had made him change his mind. Australian Medical Association Victorian president Dr Tony Bartone welcomed the move. " There is a growing body of evidence on cannabis as an effective treatment for some types of chronic pain, the control of muscle spasticity, some forms of nausea and as an appetite-stimulant in patients with weight loss due to cancer or HIV," he said. With Anna Whitelaw - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom