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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Medical Marijuana Bill Gains Support
Title:US NJ: Medical Marijuana Bill Gains Support
Published On:2009-06-05
Source:Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ)
Fetched On:2009-06-05 15:57:12
MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL GAINS SUPPORT

Assembly Panel Passes Version Listing Diseases

The effort to allow severely ill New Jerseyans to use marijuana to
ease their pain gained momentum yesterday as an Assembly committee
cleared a revamped bill that would also set strict limits on who can
grow, distribute or get the drug.

The bill, which would make New Jersey the 14th state to allow
marijuana use for medical purposes, includes restrictions lawmakers
added in response to criticism that a measure passed earlier this
year by the state Senate was too lax, allowing patients to grow their own.

Assemblyman Reed Gusciora (D-Mercer), one of the sponsors, said,
"When all other medical conventional treatments do not work, this
will at least give an opportunity for patients and their doctors to
explore other methods of treatment, but in a responsible way."

The bill cleared the Assembly Health Committee despite opponents'
arguments that legalizing marijuana for any use sends the wrong
message to young people.

The vote prompted a wave of applause and a chorus of "thank-yous" in
the packed committee room.

The amended New Jersey Compassionate Use Medical Marijuana Act would
not permit people to grow their own marijuana, instead creating
licensed "alternative-treatment centers" to produce the drug.

It also has tougher restrictions on who would be allowed to legally
acquire marijuana. The Senate bill would have made people eligible
based on symptoms, such as chronic pain and muscle spasms. The bill
approved yesterday restricts eligibility to people with specific diseases.

The qualifying illnesses are cancer, multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS,
seizure disorder, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and "any other
medical condition" approved by the state health department, according
to the bill.

"This bill will be the most restrictive in the United States," said
Sen. Nicholas Scutari (D-Union), sponsor of the original bill. He
admitted this version is stricter than he would have liked, "but this
is real progress. ... We do owe a special duty to our ill and infirm."

Assembly Health Committee chairman Herb Conaway (D-Burlington), a
physician, repeatedly said the bill will pass, although there may be
more changes.

Speaking in Favor

Diane Riportella of Egg Harbor Township, sitting in a wheelchair,
wept during yesterday's hearing as she described how the fatal
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig's
disease, "has taken away my life and my independence."

"It saddens and enrages me that I have to fight for the right to use
and safely access the medicine that relieves my suffering," she said.

Nancy Fedder of Hillsborough told the committee she has secretly
acquired the drug to help her cope with severe leg and back pain
caused by multiple sclerosis. She consumes only a modest amount
through an inhaler, "without getting high, and without disrupting my
work" as a database programmer.

Nearly a dozen law enforcement officers, school officials, family and
anti-drug activists urged the committee to postpone the vote to allow
more time for people to digest the redrawn legislation.

Barbara McCullough, a school counselor and member of the Association
of Student Assistance Professionals-New Jersey, said the committee
ought to be more concerned with how kids perceive this bill. "The
message they are getting is that marijuana is already legal -- that's
what they tell me," she said.

After the vote, Mount Olive police officer Joseph T. Abrusci, a
member of a group of 300 law enforcement officers trained to detect
drivers under the influence, said the bill still concerns him because
it does not say physicians should recommend medical marijuana as a
last resort when legal drugs have failed. He worries the roads will
be more crowded with unfit drivers.

"There are a lot of loopholes," Abrusci said.

The measure would require a licensed physician with whom the patient
has an existing relationship to first recommend medical marijuana.
The state Department of Health and Senior Services would then have to
give its approval before the patient could obtain up to one ounce of
marijuana per month. It also would require people approved for
medical marijuana to personally get it from a producing center, or
have a courier deliver it to them.

The panel's vote on the revised bill (A804/S119) was 7-1 vote with
three abstentions. It now advances to the Assembly, and would then
have to return to the Senate before it can be considered by Gov. Jon Corzine.
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