Pubdate: April 1, 1998 Source: The Record (Kitchener-Waterloo) Contact: Jean Goddu LONDON MARIJUANA CLUB STARTS DISTRIBUTION AMID CONTROVERSY She knows firsthand the devastating effects of having her home raided by police searching for pot. That's why Lynn harichy is willing to risk going through it again. She's started a medical marijuana club that begins distributing pot today, to provide a service she hopes will stop anyone enduring what she did. "We don't want to be criminals but there is a necessity for it," Harichy, who suffers from multiple sclerosis and smokes pot to ease her symptoms, said in a telephone interview from her home in London, Ont. Harichy is scheduled to appear in court later this month on a charge of pot possession, but lawyers were headed to court today to postpone the appearance until the fall. Harichy, 37, is well aware she's breaking the law again by distributing weed to members of her club but she says it's a price she's willing to pay. Helping people reduce their pain is her reward. "It's nice to see people not have to suffer so much," she said. "We're not making any money off it...this is just for compassion reasons. "You have to be sympathetic to these people that are suffering. It's not right to have people suffer, especially if there's something out there that can help them." There are about 70 members of the London club. All clients submit letters from their doctors stating their medical condition before marijuana is provided for them by the club. The drug is considered effective in alleviating symptoms of multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, cancer and AIDS. Members are given a quater ounce of organically grown marijuana a week or one ounce a month, said Harichy. She says she's met both health Minister Allan Rock and Prime Minister Jean Chretien and she believes medical marijuana will soon be available. Derek Kent, a spokesperson for Rock, declined comment on Harichy's club. But he noted that Rock has already said the government is "examining the issue of using marijuana for medical purposes." Buyers' clubs are already up and running in Toronto and Vancouver. In California and Arizona, state laws have been reformed to allow the medical use of marijuana. More Ontario clubs are in the works. "Nobody's had any problems to the best of my knowledge," said Alan Young, the lawyer who sought government authorization for the Ontario clubs. "Police are very noncommittal on the issue," he said. "They'll probably wait until there are complaints or the buyers' clubs become a nuisance in the community." Harichy and other club owners are commiting acts of civil disobedience to push the government into making reforms, Young said "We can't wait. There's too many people who are suffering now. We have to go ahead with it," said Harichy. But Terry Parker, an epileptic who supports medical marijuana, says buyers' clubs aren't the solution. "These people would be much better off if they got more public support for legalization," he said. Parker uses pot--"it's the best drug in theworld"-- to control his seizures. In December, cultivation and possession charges against him were stayed by an Ontario court. The ruling is being appealed by the federal government. "It's not a great idea to (open the centres) and get busted. I've been through this rigmarole and it's pain," he said. "I'm not trying to deter these people. Their heart's in the right place but their brain's not." Parker is critical of the federal government's decision to legalize hemp production while it continues to oppose medical use of marijuana. "I find it kind of off the wall that we put material purposes over the sanctity of human life," he said. "If you want to grow it for greed, that's OK. But if you want to grow it for need...you're going to jail."