News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: Smoked Out |
Title: | US NV: Smoked Out |
Published On: | 2008-02-15 |
Source: | North Lake Tahoe Bonanza (NV) |
Fetched On: | 2008-02-16 13:57:35 |
SMOKED OUT
Federal Government Blocks State-Run Medical Marijuana Distribution
The water, the lights, the seeds, the soil. The problem could be
several things.
Some patients will learn how to grow, said Claude Miller, a Nevada
medical marijuana consultant, some won't.
"There's patients who can't grow a flower," he said. "Much less
medical marijuana."
That's part of the reason he started his business. Many of the 900
patients in Nevada's program know little about the plant when they register.
But those patients, despite a provision in state law, must grow their
marijuana themselves or find a state-approved "caregiver" who will
grow it for them.
"(Marijuana) is a godsend and it really helps people," said Miller,
who supports medical marijuana only under a tightly regulated system.
Patients, however, will not be able to get the drug-like other
prescriptions the state recognizes unless the federal government
changes its stance.
Following a 2000 ballot initiative, the state Legislature wrote the
constitutional amendment into law including a section that ordered
the University of Nevada School of Medicine to research marijuana and
develop a program to distribute it to patients.
The 2001 law says the Legislature understands the state's
"obligation" to research a distribution program, but also says it
must do it with the permission from the federal government.
The ballot initiative, approved by 65 percent of voters, called for
"appropriate methods for supply of the plant to patients authorized
to use it." These patients include residents diagnosed with illnesses
such as cancer, glaucoma and AIDS.
The federal government, however, rejects the opinion of the 12 states
with medical marijuana programs.
"Smoked marijuana has not withstood the rigors of science," according
to the Web site of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. "(It) is
not medicine, and it is not safe."
Federal authority
Federal policy, supported by the past three presidents, has stalled
research and development of a state distribution program.
Dr. Dave Lupan, an associate dean at the state school of medicine,
said the university has made "no progress whatsoever" on the
legislature's mandate. It will stay that way at least until there is
a new president, he said.
It is unlikely the policy will change under the next administration,
though. Republican presidential candidates John McCain and Mitt
Romney do not support legalizing medical marijuana. Democratic
presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are undecided.
But the university would have more problems than policy if it tried
to start a program. Not only does the federal government have no
interest in the school's research, Lupan said, the state has given no
money for it.
"It's not only a matter of bucking federal government authority," he
said, but of finding doctors to work for free.
The federal government itself has had medical marijuana evaluated
several times. A 1999 federally-commissioned study by the Institute
of Medicine reported, "the accumulated data indicates a potential
therapeutic value for cannabinoid drugs, particularly for symptoms
such as pain relief, control of nausea and vomiting and appetite stimulation."
The Federal Drug Administration, however, said in 2006 the medical
use of the drug is not supported by science.
Green and black thumbs
A change in federal policy that led to state distribution could,
according to supporters, help many patients.
Jennifer Bartlett, who manages the current state program through the
Nevada Department of Agriculture, said "there are some who can't grow
it, and it's a struggle."
She has not endorsed state distribution, however, and said many
patients have no problems growing their own marijuana or finding a caregiver.
A state program would help all patients, though, not just those who
have difficulty growing it, said Dan Hart, who managed the group that
led the medical marijuana ballot initiative.
The state could make sure the medicine was good quality, he said, and
this also would particularly help patients with a debilitating disease.
But some medical marijuana advocates, such as Chandler Laughlin, said
the state should not be involved with marijuana and that a state-run
program is a bad idea.
The Silver City resident and radio host did say many patients like
him can't grow high quality marijuana.
"I have a black thumb," he said.
Bruce Mirken, who supports marijuana legalization, said a state-run
program could make it easier for the state to both guarantee
effective use for patients and track illegal use by others.
It can't be difficult for patients to get the medicine they need
under the current program, he said.
"You could grow your own tomatoes, but if all your plants die, you
don't have a salad that day," said Mirken, a representative for the
Marijuana Policy Project, which has unsuccessfully pushed ballot
initiatives in Nevada to partially legalize marijuana.
A model program
If Nevada eventually does set up a distribution program, it probably
won't be the first state to do it.
New Mexico, which legalized medical marijuana in April, is working on
the rules its department of health would need to run a distribution program.
This will allow patients to get the drug the way other patients get
their medicine, said Reena Szczepanski, director of the anti-drug
prohibition New Mexico Drug Policy Alliance. It would help prevent
patients from going to the black market, she said.
But New Mexico's system might not work for Nevada, because of the
state's sparsely populated areas. She said a state-run system where
the drug is distributed through pharmacies might be better for Nevada.
The federal government itself has the only active government-run
distribution program in the country.
The Compassionate Investigational New Drug program was started in
1978 and closed to new patients by President George H.W. Bush in
1991. A few people are still in the program, though, and they get
monthly supplies of marijuana grown at the University of Mississippi.
Miller, head of Nevada Medical Marijuana Consultants, said a
state-run distribution program could be good for Nevada, but the
state should be careful not to legalize it or regulate it the way
California does, with marijuana available at licensed clubs.
"We don't want a bunch of drug-dealing thugs in this," he said.
But Miller, who became a patient after a spine surgery, said the drug
is more safe and effective for many people who would otherwise be
prescribed pain killers. Those people, he said, deserve to have their medicine.
Opponents, he said, don't understand the research or the state's program.
"We're not just a bunch of yahoos smoking reefer," he said.
Federal Government Blocks State-Run Medical Marijuana Distribution
The water, the lights, the seeds, the soil. The problem could be
several things.
Some patients will learn how to grow, said Claude Miller, a Nevada
medical marijuana consultant, some won't.
"There's patients who can't grow a flower," he said. "Much less
medical marijuana."
That's part of the reason he started his business. Many of the 900
patients in Nevada's program know little about the plant when they register.
But those patients, despite a provision in state law, must grow their
marijuana themselves or find a state-approved "caregiver" who will
grow it for them.
"(Marijuana) is a godsend and it really helps people," said Miller,
who supports medical marijuana only under a tightly regulated system.
Patients, however, will not be able to get the drug-like other
prescriptions the state recognizes unless the federal government
changes its stance.
Following a 2000 ballot initiative, the state Legislature wrote the
constitutional amendment into law including a section that ordered
the University of Nevada School of Medicine to research marijuana and
develop a program to distribute it to patients.
The 2001 law says the Legislature understands the state's
"obligation" to research a distribution program, but also says it
must do it with the permission from the federal government.
The ballot initiative, approved by 65 percent of voters, called for
"appropriate methods for supply of the plant to patients authorized
to use it." These patients include residents diagnosed with illnesses
such as cancer, glaucoma and AIDS.
The federal government, however, rejects the opinion of the 12 states
with medical marijuana programs.
"Smoked marijuana has not withstood the rigors of science," according
to the Web site of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. "(It) is
not medicine, and it is not safe."
Federal authority
Federal policy, supported by the past three presidents, has stalled
research and development of a state distribution program.
Dr. Dave Lupan, an associate dean at the state school of medicine,
said the university has made "no progress whatsoever" on the
legislature's mandate. It will stay that way at least until there is
a new president, he said.
It is unlikely the policy will change under the next administration,
though. Republican presidential candidates John McCain and Mitt
Romney do not support legalizing medical marijuana. Democratic
presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are undecided.
But the university would have more problems than policy if it tried
to start a program. Not only does the federal government have no
interest in the school's research, Lupan said, the state has given no
money for it.
"It's not only a matter of bucking federal government authority," he
said, but of finding doctors to work for free.
The federal government itself has had medical marijuana evaluated
several times. A 1999 federally-commissioned study by the Institute
of Medicine reported, "the accumulated data indicates a potential
therapeutic value for cannabinoid drugs, particularly for symptoms
such as pain relief, control of nausea and vomiting and appetite stimulation."
The Federal Drug Administration, however, said in 2006 the medical
use of the drug is not supported by science.
Green and black thumbs
A change in federal policy that led to state distribution could,
according to supporters, help many patients.
Jennifer Bartlett, who manages the current state program through the
Nevada Department of Agriculture, said "there are some who can't grow
it, and it's a struggle."
She has not endorsed state distribution, however, and said many
patients have no problems growing their own marijuana or finding a caregiver.
A state program would help all patients, though, not just those who
have difficulty growing it, said Dan Hart, who managed the group that
led the medical marijuana ballot initiative.
The state could make sure the medicine was good quality, he said, and
this also would particularly help patients with a debilitating disease.
But some medical marijuana advocates, such as Chandler Laughlin, said
the state should not be involved with marijuana and that a state-run
program is a bad idea.
The Silver City resident and radio host did say many patients like
him can't grow high quality marijuana.
"I have a black thumb," he said.
Bruce Mirken, who supports marijuana legalization, said a state-run
program could make it easier for the state to both guarantee
effective use for patients and track illegal use by others.
It can't be difficult for patients to get the medicine they need
under the current program, he said.
"You could grow your own tomatoes, but if all your plants die, you
don't have a salad that day," said Mirken, a representative for the
Marijuana Policy Project, which has unsuccessfully pushed ballot
initiatives in Nevada to partially legalize marijuana.
A model program
If Nevada eventually does set up a distribution program, it probably
won't be the first state to do it.
New Mexico, which legalized medical marijuana in April, is working on
the rules its department of health would need to run a distribution program.
This will allow patients to get the drug the way other patients get
their medicine, said Reena Szczepanski, director of the anti-drug
prohibition New Mexico Drug Policy Alliance. It would help prevent
patients from going to the black market, she said.
But New Mexico's system might not work for Nevada, because of the
state's sparsely populated areas. She said a state-run system where
the drug is distributed through pharmacies might be better for Nevada.
The federal government itself has the only active government-run
distribution program in the country.
The Compassionate Investigational New Drug program was started in
1978 and closed to new patients by President George H.W. Bush in
1991. A few people are still in the program, though, and they get
monthly supplies of marijuana grown at the University of Mississippi.
Miller, head of Nevada Medical Marijuana Consultants, said a
state-run distribution program could be good for Nevada, but the
state should be careful not to legalize it or regulate it the way
California does, with marijuana available at licensed clubs.
"We don't want a bunch of drug-dealing thugs in this," he said.
But Miller, who became a patient after a spine surgery, said the drug
is more safe and effective for many people who would otherwise be
prescribed pain killers. Those people, he said, deserve to have their medicine.
Opponents, he said, don't understand the research or the state's program.
"We're not just a bunch of yahoos smoking reefer," he said.
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