Pubdate: Sun, 12 Apr 2015 Source: Standard-Speaker (Hazleton, PA) Copyright: 2015 The Standard-Speaker Contact: http://www.standardspeaker.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1085 Author: Robert Swift MEDICAL MARIJUANA ISSUE IS SCRAMBLING PARTY LINES HARRISBURG -- A lawmaker from Tioga County has a key role in the ongoing debate over legalizing medical marijuana in Pennsylvania. Rep. Matt Baker, R-68 Wellsboro, chairman of the House Health Committee, is openly skeptical about legalizing what he considers a dangerous drug without action first from the federal Food and Drug Administration. He made his concerns known last week during a joint hearing of the Health and Judiciary committees. "I don't think the jury is in yet -- that marijuana is safe or effective," said Baker, referring to numerous medical studies he has read. He thinks a better route to go is for state lawmakers to pass a resolution urging Washington to allow scientific research and development of marijuana for medical use. The FDA classification of marijuana as a Schedule I drug having no medical value puts a damper on research, said Baker. That could be solved with an FDA waiver to allow test trials of marijuana's medical potential, he added. Baker is firmly on one side of an issue that has scrambled party lines in Harrisburg. Rep. Aaron Kaufer, R-120, Kingston, offered a different view at the hearing. He related the experience of a constituent who travels to California to get treatment with medical marijuana legally. Kaufer said the determination on using medical marijuana should be between a patient and their doctor. "It's a patient rights issue," he added. House Majority Leader Dave Reed, R-62, Indiana, said he anticipates a floor vote soon on a medical marijuana bill that helps those in need under a tightly regulated framework. "I think there is widespread support for the concept, but folks are going to want to know the details," he added. The debate has been shaped by the personal advocacy of parents of children suffering from repeated seizures who found relief from use of cannabis. Opponents question what legal access to marijuana -- even on a restricted basis -- would mean to the widespread abuse of prescription painkillers and heroin and the impact on crime. A medical marijuana bill cleared the Republican-controlled Senate last session by a strong bipartisan vote of 43-7. The main sponsors of medical marijuana legislation in that chamber are Sens. Mike Folmer, R-48, Lebanon, and Daylin Leach, D-17, King of Prussia. Lawmakers will need to strengthen the drug and alcohol treatment system if they legalize medical marijuana, said Deb Beck, president of the Drug & Alcohol Service Providers Organization of Pennsylvania. "If you are going to do this, we are going to have more business," she said. She recommended restoring funding to offset a decade of cuts to county-based drug and alcohol treatment programs and reviving programs to help students with student substance abuse problems. These programs withered with the loss of federal aid for drug-free schools, she added. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom