Pubdate: Thu, 27 May 1999 Source: Sudbury Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Sudbury Star Contact: 33 MacKenzie St., Sudbury, Ont., P3C 4Y1 Fax: (705) 674-6834 Website: http://www.thesudburystar.com Contact: Rob O'Flanagan MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION TOO LATE FOR LOCAL MAN A Chelmsford man is up on charges of possession and trafficking in a substance he calls a painkiller. That substance is marijuana. Barry Burkholder, 34, says he needs the healing power of cannabis to deal with the pain of chronic arthritis and with various ailments associated with recently-diagnosed hepatitis C. Burkholder says he contracted hepatitis C 14 years ago from an unsterilized tattoo needle. Sometimes his pain is so bad, he says, he cannot turn a door knob. His seven-year-old daughter, Nicole, has to help him up from the floor when he falls. Doctors continue to prescribe drugs which Burkholder believes are addictive and dangerous to his malfunctioning liver. The one thing he feels good about taking, and which makes him feel good, is pot. On Wednesday, the federal government moved a step closer to legalizing the use of marijuana for medical purposes. A Bloc Quebecois motion calling for the legalization of pot for medical reasons passed Tuesday night in the House of Commons. The motion calls on the government to "take steps immediately" to develop clinical trials, guidelines for its use and a safe supply of marijuana for people who need it for medical reasons. But Burkholder is not optimistic. "If it passes and becomes law, that will be great," said Burkholder, whose fingers are permanently bent from a debilitating strain of arthritis which is hereditary. "But they're not moving fast enough. (Health Minister) Allan Rock keeps talking about doing trials, but trials have already been done. There is already sufficient proof that cannabis helps people deal with their pain. The pot takes the pain from the arthritis away. It helps me sleep and it reduces depression. My liver can’t take these prescription drugs, but I can't legally use marijuana." "And if I can't, my death will be slow and painful. Now, I have this criminal charge against me, and my children are about to lose their daddy over it." Following Tuesday's vote, Rock said he would move quickly to publicize the government's plan for legalizing pot for medical reasons. Burkholder says he will apply for permission to use the drug. To date, two people in Canada can grow and use marijuana without being charged. They are Jim Wakeford, an Ontario man living with AIDS, and Terry Parker, a Toronto man who has epilepsy. "I've been charged with possession for the purpose of trafficking," says Burkholder. "But pot is my medicine. I don’t traffic in the stuff, I smoke it to relieve my pain." With files from the Canadian Press - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D