Pubdate: Wednesday, June 9, 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Page: A8 Author: Tim Harper, Ottawa Bureau AMERICAN MARIJUANA TO BE USED FOR TRIALS OTTAWA -- Marijuana from Mississippi will be used for the first clinical trials in Canada of the medicinal benefits of pot -- but Allan Rock will confirm today that a long-term supply will be home-grown. The federal health minister will announce he has accepted a trial project submitted by Toronto's Community Research Initiative, which proposed short-term tests of the effects of smoked marijuana on those suffering from AIDS. The Canadian-grown pot will not be available in time to get that off the ground, so Rock will accept marijuana grown by the U.S. National Institute of Drug Abuse from the University of Mississippi, a government source said. Rock will table documents today indicating he expects to have the Mississippi pot available to him over the course of the summer and begin Canada's first clinical tests by the end of 1999. The tests will take place in a number of cities, including Toronto. But Rock is expected to announce Health Canada is negotiating with a Canadian company that has developed a business plan for a steady Canadian source of pot. He will also announce Health Canada is negotiating with a British firm, GW Pharmaceuticals, to conduct Canadian tests on the benefits of "smokeless marijuana," in which a liquid form of pot is inhaled. The tests will study the benefits of inhaled pot, which is taken through devices similar to those used by asthma sufferers, but does not expose users to the tar from smoked marijuana. It also gives no high to the user. Rock will also grant the first two exemptions under the Controlled Substance Act, which allow those exempted to cultivate and smoke their own marijuana for medicinal purposes. The Ontario Superior Court last month granted that interim right to Toronto AIDS activist Jim Wakeford, one of the two expected to get exemptions. Rock is reviewing another 30 applications and has promised decisions on those cases within 15 working days of his department receiving all documentation. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea