Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jan 2015 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Charles Hamilton Page: A11 NO MEDICAL MARIJUANA IN THIS JOINT, SCHOOL TELLS STUDENT SASKATOON - Every morning Michael Wileniec wakes up in excruciating pain. He lives with a rare bone disease called hereditary multiple exostoses and says the only thing that eases the pain even a little is his medically prescribed marijuana. In the six years since he got his prescription, Wileniec says his quality of life has improved considerably. This week that changed when he was told he could no longer medicate at school. "When I went to Nutana (Collegiate) two-and-a-half years ago they were completely OK with me using medical marijuana," Wileniec said. Now that high school, under the direction of Saskatoon Public Schools, has barred him from attending class under the influence of his doctor-prescribed medication. "I was just advised that I am not allowed to come to school under the influence of medical marijuana," he said. Wileniec said until this week he medicated by smoking marijuana joints and using a hand-held vaporizer outside the school between and before classes. His teachers, he said, were aware of his condition and his prescription and had no problem with it. A letter from superintendent of education Lisa Fleming says "he must consume marijuana at a time not connected to school" because of concerns for "the safety of all campus members." No one from the school board was available for comment, but in a written statement Friday, a spokesperson said the rules for medical marijuana are the same as for other potentially mind-altering prescribed drugs. "We would be concerned whether anyone - either student or staff - was on school grounds while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, whether prescription or otherwise," the statement says. Wileniec doesn't buy that answer and believes the new school directive is in violation of his right to attend high school and get the credits he needs to graduate. He pointed out there are plenty of students on school grounds who are under the influence of prescribed narcotics. "People that use Ritalin, it's a narcotic as well and they do come to school high. They are literally expected to do it in order to function - it should be the same for me," he said. Fellow medical marijuana patient Xander Nichol, who has known Wileniec for years, agrees. "How are you no longer safe because he is medicating with marijuana?" Nichol said. "We need to acknowledge the medical value, not run from it." The letter, which Wileniec shared, went on the say that "accommodations" will be made for any student who is prescribed medical marijuana. He could be given take-home work and allowed to attend school for short periods of time while not under the influence of his prescribed marijuana. Wileniec is not the only student trying navigate medical marijuana and high school. Local news reports in Calgary indicate that one family said their son's high school has allowed the student to vaporize marijuana at school. Wileniec, who is 21, is at Nutana because his condition and the resulting surgeries made it difficult to finish school. He said if and when he gets the four credits he needs to graduate, he wants to become a pilot or a lawyer advocating for the rights of medical marijuana patients. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom