Pubdate: Mon, 15 Aug 2016 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2016 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.ajc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Kristina Torres RULING STUNS MEDICAL POT ADVOCATES Feds Keep Marijuana on the List of Most Dangerous Drugs. Federal officials' announcement last week to keep marijuana on the list of most dangerous drugs has stunned Georgia advocates, who called it "insane" and said it would hurt families trying to access a form of medical marijuana legally allowed here. "The impact on Georgia's families could be huge, as it could further delay getting access to safe, lab-tested product here in Georgia," said Blaine Cloud, who with his wife, Shannon, have been at the forefront of an organized push by parents to expand Georgia's year-old medical marijuana law. The law allows patients and, in the case of children, families who register with the state to possess up to 20 ounces of a limited form of cannabis oil to treat severe forms of eight specific illnesses, including cancer, Parkinson's disease and epilepsy. As of last month, the registry had 830 people on it. But it's up to patients how to get the drug here, a proposition made more fraught because federal law bans interstate transport of any form of the drug. The state law does not allow in-state growing of the drug for medical purposes or allow some manufacturers to ship it here, including for legal use of the oil. Advocates tried earlier this year to convince lawmakers to ease that restriction, but to no avail. A big sticking point for both policymakers and law enforcement officials in Georgia is the federal classification of marijuana as a Schedule I drug, the most dangerous class of drugs with a high potential for abuse and addiction, and no accepted medical uses. Many Georgia officials feel that federal classification needs to change before the state's law can be expanded. "Currently, parents and patients are having to either travel across the country and smuggle their medicine back home several times a year or buy marijuana here illegally and make their own oil in their kitchens, with no idea whether it's safe," Cloud said. While marijuana continues to be classified by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration as a Schedule I drug, federal officials said they would now allow more research into the drug's medical uses and expand the number of places allowed to grow marijuana by the National Institute on Drug Abuse for research purposes. "We definitely applaud the NIDA decision to lift the monopoly on marijuana available for research, so hopefully more research can be done in the future," Cloud said. "But with it still listed as Schedule I, the many departmental approvals needed and barriers in place are still a tremendous obstacle to anyone wanting to do that research here in the U.S." "Until we have a locally available, safe, lab-tested product that our doctors can work with, then Georgians will continue to suffer," Cloud said. Gov. Nathan Deal, who has resisted expansion of the state's medical marijuana law, has backed the use of clinical trials in Georgia to study cannabis oil's effect on children suffering from seizure disorders. The Medical College of Georgia's Dr. Yong Park said last month that researchers were encouraged by early results in Georgia that involved a specific drug, the cannabis-derived oil Epidiolex. Other results are pending, but of 30 patients who took the drug for at least four months, 63 percent saw a reduction in severe seizures. And six patients - about 20 percent - appeared to be seizure-free. Georgia state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, who authored Georgia's medical marijuana law, called the federal decision "insane" and said it "now becomes a full-on 'state's rights' issue, and we as Georgia leaders must be willing to address the proper way to provide safe, lab-tested medical cannabis for our citizens." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom