Pubdate: Fri, 03 Oct 2014 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2014 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Note: gives priority to local writers Author: Jeffrey Cassady MORGAN MAKES CASE FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA DAYTONA BEACH - John Morgan, the prominent Orlando personal injury attorney, is confident Floridians will approve a ballot initiative he champions that would allow for medical marijuana use in the state. But, he expects the fight to get a lot tougher as the Nov. 4 election approaches. Morgan and Miami-based lobbyist Benjamin Pollara, who manages the pro-medical marijuana group United for Care, met with The News-Journal's editorial board Thursday to discuss the initiative. Morgan said United for Care's most-recent polling showed that 67 to 69 percent of Floridians supported medical marijuana, but that was before opponents took to the airwaves across the state with ads critical of the initiative. For the measure to pass, 60 percent of voters must approve it. Pollara said he expects approval numbers to fall over the next month as Floridians are exposed to "an onslaught of negative ads" regarding the initiative. "But, I think we will win," Pollara said. "Most people have a personal connection to this issue." The proposed amendment would allow doctors to recommend marijuana for patients suffering from "debilitating medical conditions." The amendment names several such conditions, including glaucoma and cancer, but also grants doctors the ability to recommend marijuana for "other conditions" if the doctor believes the benefits of marijuana outweigh the health risks. Opponents of the amendment, like Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson, say the "other conditions" language would enable doctors to recommend marijuana for almost any patient. Johnson told The News-Journal's editorial board last month he worries that some doctors would recommend marijuana for patients who say they're suffering from headaches and other minor ailments. Morgan dismissed that argument Thursday, saying that doctor recommendations would have to be approved by the state, which would identify and investigate physicians who frequently make questionable recommendations. He said addictive painkillers - which he argues are far more dangerous than marijuana - are already legal and unscrupulous doctors could prescribe them for aches and other minor ailments. "It's the lesser of two evils," Morgan said of medical marijuana. "If you had to have a bad doc, would you rather him be bad by prescribing OxyContin that can kill you and will definitely hook you? Or would you rather him be bad by prescribing medical marijuana?" Morgan and Pollara also addressed criticism that the amendment would enable minors to get doctor recommendations for medical marijuana without parental consent. Pollara noted that in most cases minors in Florida are already barred from consenting to their own medical care. "I'm sure John has a couple hundred lawyers who would be happy to sue a doctor if they treated your minor child without your consent," Pollara said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom