News (Media Awareness Project) - US VT: Panel Approves Expansion of Medical Marijuana |
Title: | US VT: Panel Approves Expansion of Medical Marijuana |
Published On: | 2007-01-20 |
Source: | Burlington Free Press (VT) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 17:24:04 |
PANEL APPROVES EXPANSION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROGRAM
MONTPELIER -- More Vermonters would have the option
of using marijuana to treat severe, persistent and debilitating
symptoms that have failed to respond to other medical treatments under
a bill approved Friday by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The bill, recommended on a 4-1 vote, would expand eligibility beyond
the limits set now in Vermont's two-year-old law, which restricts
participation to people with cancer, multiple sclerosis or AIDS.
Under the Judiciary proposal, individuals with any chronic,
progressive and debilitating condition that produces severe and
persistent wasting syndrome, pain, nausea or seizures could seek
protection from state prosecution for using marijuana to feel better.
The proposal requires prospective participants to have tried
traditional medical treatment first to relieve symptoms before turning
to marijuana.
"We aren't legalizing marijuana," said Sen. John Campbell, D-Windsor,
one of the bill's sponsors. "You have to look at this from a
compassionate perspective," he explained. "Someone suffering from such
devastating illnesses as we address in this, they should be able to
use a substance that will alleviate their symptoms."
The bill also would allow people registered with the Medical Marijuana
Program in the Vermont Department of Public Safety to grow more
marijuana plants than the current law allows. The bill would permit
four mature plants and 10 immature plants, up from one mature and two
immature plants.
Participants would pay less to register, too. The current fee is $100
a year, but would drop to $50 if the bill became law.
Finally, the committee agreed that doctors outside Vermont could
certify that individuals applying to the medical marijuana registry
have the specified illnesses or intractable symptoms. The existing
restriction -- Vermont doctors only -- created problems for Vermonters
who see physicians in other states, which is common in some border
communities.
Sen. Alice Nitka, D-Windsor, was the lone opponent of the changes.
"It's the expansion of the diseases," she explained. "It seems too
unstructured to me."
Nitka also worried about allowing participants to grow more plants,
noting the committee heard conflicting testimony. "There seemed to be
discrepancies in the amount of marijuana produced from a plant grown
indoors."
The bill moves next to the Senate Health and Welfare Committee where
advocates will push to further expand eligibility to include
individuals with glaucoma.
MONTPELIER -- More Vermonters would have the option
of using marijuana to treat severe, persistent and debilitating
symptoms that have failed to respond to other medical treatments under
a bill approved Friday by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The bill, recommended on a 4-1 vote, would expand eligibility beyond
the limits set now in Vermont's two-year-old law, which restricts
participation to people with cancer, multiple sclerosis or AIDS.
Under the Judiciary proposal, individuals with any chronic,
progressive and debilitating condition that produces severe and
persistent wasting syndrome, pain, nausea or seizures could seek
protection from state prosecution for using marijuana to feel better.
The proposal requires prospective participants to have tried
traditional medical treatment first to relieve symptoms before turning
to marijuana.
"We aren't legalizing marijuana," said Sen. John Campbell, D-Windsor,
one of the bill's sponsors. "You have to look at this from a
compassionate perspective," he explained. "Someone suffering from such
devastating illnesses as we address in this, they should be able to
use a substance that will alleviate their symptoms."
The bill also would allow people registered with the Medical Marijuana
Program in the Vermont Department of Public Safety to grow more
marijuana plants than the current law allows. The bill would permit
four mature plants and 10 immature plants, up from one mature and two
immature plants.
Participants would pay less to register, too. The current fee is $100
a year, but would drop to $50 if the bill became law.
Finally, the committee agreed that doctors outside Vermont could
certify that individuals applying to the medical marijuana registry
have the specified illnesses or intractable symptoms. The existing
restriction -- Vermont doctors only -- created problems for Vermonters
who see physicians in other states, which is common in some border
communities.
Sen. Alice Nitka, D-Windsor, was the lone opponent of the changes.
"It's the expansion of the diseases," she explained. "It seems too
unstructured to me."
Nitka also worried about allowing participants to grow more plants,
noting the committee heard conflicting testimony. "There seemed to be
discrepancies in the amount of marijuana produced from a plant grown
indoors."
The bill moves next to the Senate Health and Welfare Committee where
advocates will push to further expand eligibility to include
individuals with glaucoma.
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