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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MI: Proposed State Med Pot Rules Rile Users
Title:US MI: Proposed State Med Pot Rules Rile Users
Published On:2009-01-06
Source:Detroit News (MI)
Fetched On:2009-01-07 06:15:48
PROPOSED STATE MED POT RULES RILE USERS

LANSING -- State officials are proposing overly restrictive rules
that would undo the intent of compassionate medical marijuana law
that voters approved in November, backers of the new measure claim.

At a hearing Monday on proposed rules to govern medical marijuana
use, supporters especially objected to requirements that patients and
caregivers keep inventories of the marijuana grown for medical use.

Some said a tentative rule against public use could mean patients
would face prosecution for smoking pot on their front porches, or in
their living rooms with the drapes open.

Others said proposed security requirements for medical marijuana
would mean the state is putting tighter restrictions on pot than on
more dangerous prescription drugs, such as the pain reliever
OxyContin that patients routinely keep in their medicine cabinets.

"It seems to me you are attempting an end-run of what the people
wanted and voted for," said Ken Shapiro of East Lansing, who uses
marijuana for metastatic melanoma that, he said, has afflicted him
for 31 years.

Shapiro said he has been through radiation, chemotherapy and more
than 50 surgeries for the spreading cancer.

"Marijuana helped me get through it," he said. "It should be taken
for granted that seriously ill people are not dealing drugs."

While the new medical marijuana law technically is in effect now, the
state health department is drafting rules to govern its use.
Department officials, who want to finalize the rules by April 4, held
Monday's hearing to give voice to those who'd be affected.

The new law allows patients with cancer, HIV, AIDS, glaucoma and
other diseases to use marijuana to relieve symptoms on a doctor's
recommendation.

Under the proposed rules, those qualified to grow and use marijuana
would have to register yearly and be issued registration cards that
could be revoked for criminal use or sales. Registered medical
producers could supply no more than five patients each, and possess
no more than 12 mature plants and 2.5 ounces of marijuana per
patient. The plants and packets of drug would have to be kept in
enclosed, locked facilities.

A potential producer said the health department's proposed disclosure
and paperwork requirements would create a paper trail that could
expose him to federal prosecution. Under federal law, any marijuana
use or sale remains a crime.

"I won't follow the rules as they are now; I'll just keep growing
marijuana as I have been," said Tom Higgins of Bay City, who said he
cultivates marijuana and uses it because he believes it has kept him
from dying of hepatitis.

Karen O'Keefe, state policies director for the Washington, D.C.-based
Marijuana Policy project, said 12 other medical marijuana states
don't require restrictions like those proposed for Michigan.

Voters approved appropriate safeguards "without requiring
self-incrimination or making life overly difficult for the seriously
ill patients whom 63 percent of Michigan voters chose to allow to use
medical marijuana without fearing arrest," she said.

Desmond Mitchell, a State Bureau of Health Professions policy analyst
who conducted the hearing, said officials "will review everything and
take a look at what revisions need to be made" in the proposed rules.
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