News (Media Awareness Project) - US AK: Medical Marijuana List Tops Out At 17 Registration |
Title: | US AK: Medical Marijuana List Tops Out At 17 Registration |
Published On: | 1999-08-03 |
Source: | Anchorage Daily News (AK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 00:41:40 |
MEDICAL MARIJUANA LIST TOPS OUT AT 17 REGISTRATION
JUNEAU - The state's new registry of people allowed to smoke marijuana for
medical reasons includes only 17 people, the Department of Health and Social
Services says.
Al Zangri, head of the department's Bureau of Vital Statistics, which keeps
the registry, said the agency has rejected seven or eight applications. He
would say only that they didn't meet the requirements of the law approved by
voters last year and modified by the Legislature this spring. The law allows
registered users to grow, possess and smoke limited amounts of marijuana if
they have a doctor's recommendation that it will help a short list of
ailments including AIDS, cancer and chronic pain.
Some patients probably haven't made it through all the steps to register,
said David Finkelstein of Alaskans for Medical Rights, a group that
advocated legalizing medical marijuana.
Others, like Bill Kozlowski, a 27-year-old Juneau hemophiliac who uses
marijuana daily to control pain caused by internal bleeding, have no
intention of signing up.
Though the law does not give federal agencies access to the confidential
registry, Kozlowski believes registering could expose him to prosecution
under federal laws that don't sanction medical marijuana. "I'm not going to
register," he told the Juneau Empire for a story in Monday's edition.
"Nobody I called in either the governor's office or the state agencies could
guarantee that registry would not be accessed by the federal government."
Though the initiative made registration optional, lawmakers changed the law
to require users to sign up, arguing that it would prevent abuse of the
system and protect legitimate users from harassment.
Mike Maze, a 43-year-old Valdez construction worker, said he received a card
to use marijuana for a seizure condition and lower back pain without "any
problem at all."
But Maze, like many medical marijuana advocates, resents the requirement.
"I feel like they're discriminating against us," he said. "Why don't they
make everybody who uses codeine or barbiturates register?"
The law does not give federal agents access to the list, allowing access
only in limited cases to local and state law enforcement agencies, said
Cynthia Cooper, the deputy attorney general in charge of the Department of
Law's Criminal Division.
Though the initiative's backers opposed the mandatory registry in the
Legislature, they now urge patients to register.
"It gives those folks a get-out-of-jail-free card," Finkelstein said.
Applying for the registry costs $25. A card protects patients from state and
local prosecution for growing or possessing as much as an ounce of marijuana
in usable form and six plants.
Buying and selling pot remains illegal, and the law does not address how
patients would acquire seeds to grow it.
JUNEAU - The state's new registry of people allowed to smoke marijuana for
medical reasons includes only 17 people, the Department of Health and Social
Services says.
Al Zangri, head of the department's Bureau of Vital Statistics, which keeps
the registry, said the agency has rejected seven or eight applications. He
would say only that they didn't meet the requirements of the law approved by
voters last year and modified by the Legislature this spring. The law allows
registered users to grow, possess and smoke limited amounts of marijuana if
they have a doctor's recommendation that it will help a short list of
ailments including AIDS, cancer and chronic pain.
Some patients probably haven't made it through all the steps to register,
said David Finkelstein of Alaskans for Medical Rights, a group that
advocated legalizing medical marijuana.
Others, like Bill Kozlowski, a 27-year-old Juneau hemophiliac who uses
marijuana daily to control pain caused by internal bleeding, have no
intention of signing up.
Though the law does not give federal agencies access to the confidential
registry, Kozlowski believes registering could expose him to prosecution
under federal laws that don't sanction medical marijuana. "I'm not going to
register," he told the Juneau Empire for a story in Monday's edition.
"Nobody I called in either the governor's office or the state agencies could
guarantee that registry would not be accessed by the federal government."
Though the initiative made registration optional, lawmakers changed the law
to require users to sign up, arguing that it would prevent abuse of the
system and protect legitimate users from harassment.
Mike Maze, a 43-year-old Valdez construction worker, said he received a card
to use marijuana for a seizure condition and lower back pain without "any
problem at all."
But Maze, like many medical marijuana advocates, resents the requirement.
"I feel like they're discriminating against us," he said. "Why don't they
make everybody who uses codeine or barbiturates register?"
The law does not give federal agents access to the list, allowing access
only in limited cases to local and state law enforcement agencies, said
Cynthia Cooper, the deputy attorney general in charge of the Department of
Law's Criminal Division.
Though the initiative's backers opposed the mandatory registry in the
Legislature, they now urge patients to register.
"It gives those folks a get-out-of-jail-free card," Finkelstein said.
Applying for the registry costs $25. A card protects patients from state and
local prosecution for growing or possessing as much as an ounce of marijuana
in usable form and six plants.
Buying and selling pot remains illegal, and the law does not address how
patients would acquire seeds to grow it.
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