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News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: 'You're Alive You're Not Living'
Title:US OR: 'You're Alive You're Not Living'
Published On:2009-02-01
Source:Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
Fetched On:2009-02-02 07:53:39
'YOU'RE ALIVE; YOU'RE NOT LIVING'

Pain - Medical Marijuana Advocates Campaign For State-Regulated Dispensaries

Linda Spencer's debilitating spinal pain once prompted her doctors to
prescribe three doses of morphine a day.

"You can't focus," says Spencer, 45. "You're alive; you're not
living."

A better option? Marijuana.

Like more than 20,000 other Oregonians last year, the Gresham woman
uses medical marijuana legally to manage her pain. She was one of
about 60 people who filled a room in outer Southeast Portland on
Saturday afternoon to listen to California marijuana activist and
grower Ed Rosenthal talk about the best growing practices.

Voter Power and Oregon Green Free, two medical marijuana rights
organizations, also used the event to publicize efforts to change
Oregon's decade-old Medical Marijuana Act. Medical marijuana activists
are gathering signatures for an initiative for the 2010 ballot to
create state-regulated dispensaries for qualified patients.

Currently, patients must grow their own or designate a
grower.

So far, the groups have collected 26,000 signatures and expect to
submit 150,000 signatures this fall, said Voter Power director John
Sajo. the initiative needs 82,000 to qualify.

If approved, the revision would fix a fundamental problem in the state
law, Sajo said.

"A law that depends on sick people to produce their own medicine is
deeply and seriously flawed," he said.

Medical marijuana activists failed on a similar effort in 2004.
Opponents of medical marijuana say too many people abuse the system,
using it to sell cannabis illegally.

But Sajo said the proposal, in addition to helping patients, could
become a cash cow for the state, through taxing sales and charging
licensing fees to growers. Voter Power's early estimates forecast as
much as $30 million in revenue in the first year, he said. He
projected as many as 100,000 patients in the next decade.

"We feel confident voters are ready for this," Sajo
said.

Registered nurse May Wiley said she started volunteering with medical
marijuana efforts a year ago.

She helps terminally ill patients with less than six months to live
connect with marijuana suppliers.

"They just don't know where to turn," she said.

The initiative could change that. "I'm tired of seeing patients
suffer," Wiley said.
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