HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Ottawa Loses Marijuana Fight
Pubdate: Sat, 12 Jan 2008
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Meagan Fitzpatrick, Canwest News Services
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

OTTAWA LOSES MARIJUANA FIGHT

Licensed Growers No Longer Restricted To Just One Customer

The federal government lost another court challenge to its 
controversial medical marijuana program, and now has 30 days to 
decide whether to appeal the ruling that declared one of its key 
policies unconstitutional.

Under the current set of regulations, licensed producers are only 
allowed to grow the drug for one patient at a time. Federal Court 
Judge Barry Strayer said that the one-to-one ratio violates the 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The decision, the latest in a string of court cases, will essentially 
mean more choice for approved medical marijuana users and should 
provide easier access for them to the drug.

"What the federal court effectively did was assert that the 
government of Canada does not have a monopoly over the production and 
distribution of medical marijuana," said Alan Young, one of the 
lawyers that launched the court battle on behalf of 30 patients.

Authorized users who cannot grow their own marijuana because they are 
too ill, or for other reasons, must then rely on a sole source 
provider -- either a licensed private producer, if they can find one 
willing to produce only for them, or the government, which buys 
plants from a Saskatchewan company.

"In my view it is not tenable for the government, consistently with 
the right established in other courts for qualified medical users to 
have reasonable access to marijuana, to force them either to buy from 
the government contractor, grow their own or be limited to the 
unnecessarily restrictive system of designated producers," Strayer 
wrote in his decision, which was released late Thursday.

The one-to-one ratio was first struck down by an Ontario appeal court 
in 2003, but the government reinstated the policy several months 
later, prompting the current court challenge.

"We're reviewing the decision," said Paul Duchesne, a spokesman for 
Health Canada, which regulates the program. He would not comment 
further and did not indicate how quickly the government would decide 
about appealing the ruling. "As soon as there is a decision we will 
make that clear," he said.

Young and his co-counsel Ron Marzel described the court's ruling as a 
"nail in the coffin" of the one-to-one ratio restriction.

"In theory, patients now have a choice whether to buy from the 
government or whether to create the small collectives of patients 
that go to an experienced and knowledgeable grower," said Young.

There are about 2,000 people legally allowed to use marijuana for 
medical purposes but fewer than 20 per cent buy it from the 
government's supplier. Some patients say the quality is poor and 
others say only one strain of the plant is offered -- different 
strains having unique therapeutic effects.

"It's a clear message to Ottawa that they can't stand in the way of 
providing much-needed medication for these individuals," said Marzel.

He does expect, however, that the government will appeal the 
decision. If it does, or if it introduces a policy that only slightly 
changes the ratio, the lawyers say they will head back into court. 
Young said they will fight for a measure called supervisory 
jurisdiction, which would require Health Canada to submit progress 
reports to the court.

Strayer has already denied the request but Young said he will try 
again and has not ruled out lawsuits against Health Canada.

"I'm just trying to clean up the law and to ensure that sick people 
have proper, lawful access to a medicine of their choice," said 
Young, a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto. "But 
because of all the obstacles that have been put in that path over the 
last eight years, there will reach a point where it's no longer about 
trying to use the courts to try and improve the program but it will 
be about punishing Health Canada for their incorrigibility."
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