Source: New York Times (NY) Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Pubdate: Thu, 17 Sep 1998 Author: The Associated Press D.C. TO VOTE ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA WASHINGTON (AP) -- Election officials approved an initiative Thursday to let voters decide whether to legalize marijuana for medical purposes in the nation's capital. The District of Columbia Board of Elections had rejected the initiative a month ago but reconsidered because of a Sept. 3 ruling by D.C Superior Court Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle that the board wrongly dismissed 4,600 signatures that a petitioner collected. The board threw them out because the petitioner provided an incorrect address for herself on an affidavit. Huvelle ruled the woman's mistake was not enough to invalidate the signatures she collected. AIDS activists hailed the reversal. ``We are certainly pleased that D.C. voters are going to have a chance to decide for themselves on this important initiative,'' said James Millner, a spokesman for the Whitman-Walker Clinic, which treats AIDS patients. ``We don't like pot, but when other medications fail you should not have to face a jail sentence just because you're trying to keep weight on,'' said Wayne Turner of the activist group ACT UP. The White House drug policy office disagreed. ``We are confident that the voters of the District of Columbia will make the right decision that science, not politics, should determine what is safe and effective medicine,'' spokesman Bob Weiner said. Marijuana should not be used for medical purposes unless the Food and Drug Administration approves it, Weiner said. The Republican-led Congress also is critical of medical marijuana initiatives. On Wednesday, the House passed a resolution condemning attempts to legalize marijuana for medical use. The House version of a bill appropriating money for the District of Columbia was amended to make it illegal to spend money carrying out the initiative. If passed, that would prevent officials from printing the ballot and processing its results, but it is unlikely to be acted on before the Nov. 3 election. The Senate has yet to pass its appropriations bill for the district, and it is unclear if the House amendment would make it into final legislation or be signed into law before the vote. In 1996, voters in California and Arizona passed initiatives similar to the district's, but the Arizona Legislature enacted legislation forbidding sale in the state of drugs not approved as medicine by the FDA. Advocates contend marijuana helps patients of serious diseases such as AIDS and cancer contend with pain and nausea. Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady