Pubdate: Fri, 18 Mar 2016 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2016 Journal Sentinel Inc. Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/general/30627794.html Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 THE STATE SENATE'S FAILURE Scott Fitzgerald had indicated he was in favor of a bill to help kids prone to seizures get the medicine they need. So was a majority of the state Senate. But the apparent support of the Senate majority leader and his colleagues wasn't enough when three top Republicans - Senate President Mary Lazich of New Berlin and Senators Duey Stroebel of Cedarburg and Leah Vukmir of Wauwatosa - blocked it. So Fitzgerald derailed a floor vote on the legislation earlier this week by scheduling a hearing on the bill and then canceling it. Bills can't be brought to the floor if a hearing is pending. Fitzgerald used the end around to protect his colleagues. Democrats countered by attempting to take a two-thirds vote to override the rule, but Fitzgerald quickly adjourned the Senate before a vote could be held. Just more politics as usual in the state Capitol. And it left even some Republicans grasping for an explanation. "They should use actual facts to explain why they are blocking the will and hope of parents statewide," said one of the bill's bipartisan supporters, Sen. Van Wanggaard (R-Racine). Assembly Bill 228, which passed the lower house last month, involves the use of cannabis oil, a marijuana byproduct that advocates believe can help reduce seizures in kids who have few other options. The Legislature approved a bill in 2014 to allow families to obtain cannabidiol oil, but the conditions under which they could get it were so restrictive that the law was essentially useless. AB 228 was meant to mend that flaw in the original legislation. Lazich, Stroebel and Vukmir believe the bill could give Native American tribes a legal lever to force open legalization of marijuana in Wisconsin through the federal courts. The tribes used a similar approach to pave the way for tribal casinos, arguing that since the state had a lottery, they should have gaming. But we're skeptical that will happen, based on what the tribes have said, and it's not clear that passing this bill bolsters that argument any more than the original legislation did two years ago. What has happened is that families once again were kicked in the teeth by a group of legislators who either can't think straight or don't try very hard to do so. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom