Pubdate: April 23, 1999 Source: Vancouver Sun (Canada) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 1999 Contact: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Doug Ward, Vancouver Sun Note: The Compassion Club website is http://www.thecompassionclub.org/ DECRIMINALIZE THERAPEUTIC MARIJUANA NOW, MP SAYS Ottawa should not wait until the completion of clinical trials before it decriminalizes marijuana for therapeutic reasons, says a Bloc Quebecois MP. "Many people need to take marijuana to cope with their illness and it is important to adjust the law to this new reality," Bernard Bigras said Thursday during a visit to Vancouver. Bigras introduced a private member's bill in Parliament last year calling on Ottawa to decriminalize marijuana for medical reasons. The bill is expected to be debated in June and Bigras is on a national tour to raise the issue. Health Minister Allan Rock recently announced that clinical tests will be held to see whether marijuana provides therapeutic benefits to people suffering from a painful disease or terminal illness. Bigras was to meet today with Vancouver's Compassion Club, which in recent years has been discreetly supplying marijuana for free or at reduced rates to sick people in the Lower Mainland. The club's activity is illegal but it receives referrals from agencies serving people with cancer, AIDS and multiple sclerosis. "The Compassion Club is a model for Canada," said Bigras. "Club members can take the marijuana in a secure environment and receive a very good quality of marijuana." Bigras said that many people are resorting to buying marijuana from the street and finding it laced with other substances that only exacerbate their pain. The MP said it is unfair that sick, even dying people, can still face stiff fines or jail time for using marijuana. Compassion Club founder Hilary Black said her members strongly support Bigras' bill. She said the clinical trials proposed by Rock will be of little benefit to many of her club's 700 members. "The truth is that the people who are in most need now are not going to be around to take advantage of the trials," Black said. "The people who are furthest along with cancer and HIV infection need to be freed of the fear and shame of breaking the law." The Liberal government does not plan to change the Criminal Code for the trials, but will use a section of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act that allows the minister to exempt people from prosecution for special circumstances. Black said there is a long list of ill people in B.C. waiting for an exemption so they can buy low-cost marijuana. She said the drug helps relax spasms for multiple sclerosis sufferers and people with epileptic seizures. It also helps to relax muscles, counter nausea, improve sleep patterns and stimulate appetite. Bigras said many MPs are still resistant to the notion of legalizing marijuana for any purpose. Nevertheless, the Quebec MP expects strong support from other Bloc members, the NDP, many Tories and some Liberals and Reformers. B.C. Reform MP Jim Hart has been an outspoken defender of legalizing the drug for medicinal purposes. Bigras said his bill has also received support from national groups representing people with AIDS, hemophiliacs and senior citizens. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart