Pubdate: Wed, 04 Nov 1998 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1998 Associated Press. Author: John Hughes, The Associated Press GROUPS CALL ON GOVERNMENT TO ALLOW MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA WASHINGTON (AP) -- The federal government should allow medical use of pot, now that five states have joined the parade by approving ballot measures on the issue, medical marijuana advocates said Wednesday. Voters in Washington state, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada and Alaska passed measures Tuesday allowing medical use of marijuana. California voters approved the cultivation and use of medicinal marijuana in 1996. "The election last night was an incredible victory," Ethan A. Nadelmann, director of the Lindesmith Center, said at a news conference Wednesday at the nation's capital. "The people have spoken clearly that this should be available." Dr. Rob Killian, who sponsored the Washington state measure, said about 1,200 patients in his state will be helped by the ballot question. He called on the federal government to make marijuana available to suffering patients nationwide. "No one has proven to me why I should be thought of as a criminal because I give marijuana to my patients," he said. But federal officials said the state outcomes don't change federal policy on pot. "The last time I checked, marijuana was not a healthy substance," said Jim McDonough, director of strategy at the Office of National Drug Control Policy. "Marijuana is actually a harmful substance." McDonough said the Institute of Medicine at the National Academy of Sciences is studying whether marijuana could be used as a medicine. The Food and Drug Administration and Institutes of Health also would undertake rigorous studies before marijuana is approved for medicinal use. "Allowing marijuana or any other drug to bypass this process is unwise," the office said in a statement Wednesday. Supporters of the state ballot questions say that smoking pot can ease pain, restore appetite and quell nausea for seriously ill patients. The measures on state ballots Tuesday were backed by New York billionaire philanthropist George Soros and the California-based Americans for Medical Rights. In Colorado and Washington, D.C., the question of legalizing marijuana for medical use also appeared on ballots. But Colorado Secretary of State Vikki Buckley ruled that medical marijuana backers fell more than 2,000 signatures short in their petition drive, so the vote didn't count. In D.C., Congress imposed language that would have prevented the referendum from taking effect, had it passed. Then, under pressure from Congress, the city's board of elections decided not to release the results of the vote. But backers said their own exit polls showed the question carried in Colorado and Washington, D.C. They were especially pleased with a separate Oregon vote, which they called a turning point in American attitudes about criminalization of marijuana. The Oregon voters rejected a measure that would have made possession of less than an ounce of marijuana a class C misdemeanor, with possible jail time. The offense is now equivalent to a traffic ticket. "The people have begun to feel that we have overly criminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana, that we don't want people like that filling up our jail cells," said Bill Zimmerman, director of Americans for Medical Rights. Medical marijuana backers plan ballot initiatives in Maine next year, in Colorado in 2000 and again in Nevada in 2000, because Nevada law requires a second approval before the initiative can take effect. The backers said they will seek votes in Massachusetts, Florida, Michigan and Ohio in 2000 if federal officials fail to make progress on loosening their medical marijuana policy. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry