Pubdate: Tue, 19 Apr 2016 Source: Daily Times (Primos, PA) Copyright: 2016 The Daily Times Contact: http://www.delcotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1284 THE WAY GOVERNMENT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK "This is what government is supposed to look like." Just let that notion sink in for awhile. We've gotten accustomed to the opposite when it comes to politics. It doesn't matter if it's Washington, D.C., or Harrisburg. Somewhere along the line, we lost sight of the purpose of government serving the public. Instead what we all too often have amounts to little more than political bloodsport. It's as if Vince Lombardi had hijacked the nation's political agenda. "Winning is not everything, it's the only thing." Compromise? That magic elixir in which the public's business is conducted and things actually are accomplished? A quaint notion we used when talking about Republican President Ronald Reagan and Democratic House Speaker Tip O'Neill. In today's political world, as unfortunately witnessed the past seven years and change, the goal has been not to get things done, but too often to keep anything from getting done. Republicans made clear from the early days of the Obama administration that their main goal was to prevent a second Obama term. They looked to thwart him at every turn. Democrats are not without fault here, this kind of obfuscation is an equal opportunity employer in today's politics. Stall, block, oppose. The result: Gridlock. Welcome to the way things get done or more accurately don't get done in today's brutally partisan world of government inaction. Then you have what happened Sunday in Harrisburg. The words above were uttered by state Sen. Daylin Leach, one of the early and most vocal backers of a bill to allow use of medical marijuana in Pennsylvania. On Sunday Gov. Tom Wolf signed the bill into law. It will go into effect in 30 days. In doing so the Democrat - who has learned first-hand what partisan gridlock looks like in his first year at the helm of the state - actually did something much more than demonstrate that things actually can - even if they rarely do - get done in Harrisburg and other halls of government. That thought was not lost on Leach. The Democrat, who represents parts of both Delaware and Montgomery County, reached out early across the aisle to Republican Sen. Mike Folmer of Lebanon County. They were not interested in winning a political fight. They were interested in helping their constituents, children and others desperate for some kind of relief from debilitating pain from serious maladies such as multiple sclerosis and seizures. Leach could not have made that more clear in his remarks Sunday. He stressed "we," not "I." He did not describe the effort as being Democrat or Republican, but instead one of concern for all Pennsylvanians. He thanked his Republican partner Folmer, as well as House Majority Leader Dave Reed, R-62, of Indiana County. Clearly, Leach was ebullient in bringing this common-sense piece of legislation to fruition. The bill will set up a system of dispensaries to dole out medical marijuana in pill, ointment or lotion form. It will be regulated by the state and doctors who wish to prescribe it will have to register with the state. This does not pertain to pot that is smoked. But beyond that, Leach noted what else had been accomplished in this push. There were serious questions and opposition to his legislation, in both the House and Senate. But instead of being bottled up and dying on the vine, agreements were hammered out. It's called compromise. It's not a dirty word. Is just appears that way all too often. Leach made a point to stress that notion, after taking a playful jab at Folmer as his "favorite right-wing lunatic in the world." "Let us pause to actually reflect on what actually happened here, in this place, because it doesn't happen often enough," Leach said. The senator then offered a path to the way things can be - but too often are not. "We stopped being Democrats and started being caregivers," Leach said. "We stopped being Republicans and started being patients. We stopped being liberals and started being problem solvers. We stopped being conservatives and started being compromisers. We stopped being politicians and started being human beings." Leach returned to the end result of this legislation, what it means to so many suffering Pennsylvania families who have waited so long for relief. "Today, we are all healers," Leach said. In more ways than one. Let's hope that lesson is not forgotten as the state looks to tackle the serious problems it still faces - a looming pension crisis, a yawning fiscal deficit, the hopes of so many of getting the state out of the business of selling booze. We hope those open sores are as easily healed. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom