News (Media Awareness Project) - US IA: Local Legislator Lends An Ear And A Compassionate Heart |
Title: | US IA: Local Legislator Lends An Ear And A Compassionate Heart |
Published On: | 2010-06-21 |
Source: | Muscatine Journal (IA) |
Fetched On: | 2010-06-22 03:01:07 |
LOCAL LEGISLATOR LENDS AN EAR AND A COMPASSIONATE HEART FOR MEDICAL
MARIJUANA
MUSCATINE, Iowa - If Iowa supporters of medical marijuana find a
sympathetic ear in the Iowa Legislature, it will be because of
lawmakers like Jeff Kaufmann.
Kaufmann, R-Wilton, who represents the 79th House District, together
with legislative candidate Mark Lofgren of Muscatine, a fellow
Republican who's running for the seat in the 80th District currently
held by Nathan Reichert, D-Muscatine, attended a Saturday afternoon
screening of the documentary film, "Waiting to Inhale," at the Musser
Public Library.
Lofgren took notes but offered no public comments.
The event, which attracted 11 people, was sponsored by the group Iowa
Patients for Medical Marijuana, founded by Jimmy Morrison, 23, of
Muscatine.
Kaufmann urged people who want the law changed, including those with
fibromyalgia, cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and those with
Multiple Sclerosis -patients who say marijuana reduces their pain or
nausea - to be careful how they lobby their legislators.
"You are asking us to go into the fray, but we can't address your
issues without asking the tough questions," he said. "There is no
chance for this bill (which would legalize marijuana use for medical
purposes only) unless you shut the door and triple lock it" against
those who would prefer that Iowa approve marijuana for recreational
use, too.
"I'm the only legislator who showed up today. I'm here," he told a
crowd who shared with Kaufmann both their pain and their tears,
"because my mother suffered from fibromyalgia."
Lisa Jackson, 44, of Crawfordsville, also has fibromyalgia, a chronic
condition with symptoms that include pain, tenderness and stiffness
in the muscles and joints, and fatigue and anxiety.
She said that smoking marijuana has enabled her to "get out of bed,
raise 50 chickens, mow 2 1/2 acres and keep the kids fed and dressed.
To me that's a life I can be proud of."
She described a life before trying medicinal marijuana in which "my
family carried on around me, but without me."
A little more than two years ago, she said she was seated on her bed
holding her husband's gun, ready to take her own life. Then her
husband walked into the room, and the two had a heart-to-heart talk
about "how our lives had to change."
For her the most beneficial change was when she began smoking half an
ounce of marijuana each week.
"My children know I smoke and why," she said, her talk interrupted a
few times by tears. "In many ways they have paid a higher price than
I have."
Kaufmann said he got his first inkling of Iowans' strong support for
a change in the law during what he called a "listening post" event in
Clarence.
"It doesn't get much more conservative than Clarence," he said. "I
threw out (the topic of) medical marijuana and at least 90 percent of
them said they believed we should continue to have the
discussion."
"It's an idea," he added, "that you've convinced me needs to be
discussed (in the Legislature). We're still small enough (in Iowa)
that people talking to (legislators) can change our minds.
"Now," he said of the proposal, "we need to make it politically
viable."
After the film, Morrison talked about the prospects of following up
February's vote by the Iowa Board of Pharmacy to recommend that the
Legislature remove marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which by
definition have no medicinal use and a high probability of addiction.
Medical marijuana proposals died during the 2010 session. Morrison
said he and Jackson want to help form a study group that includes
patients, scientists, law enforcement officials and drug treatment
providers.
Kaufmann said he supports that idea, even if it's not appointed by
the Legislature.
"We read reports from task forces all the time," he said. "Sometimes
we turn them into bills."
MARIJUANA
MUSCATINE, Iowa - If Iowa supporters of medical marijuana find a
sympathetic ear in the Iowa Legislature, it will be because of
lawmakers like Jeff Kaufmann.
Kaufmann, R-Wilton, who represents the 79th House District, together
with legislative candidate Mark Lofgren of Muscatine, a fellow
Republican who's running for the seat in the 80th District currently
held by Nathan Reichert, D-Muscatine, attended a Saturday afternoon
screening of the documentary film, "Waiting to Inhale," at the Musser
Public Library.
Lofgren took notes but offered no public comments.
The event, which attracted 11 people, was sponsored by the group Iowa
Patients for Medical Marijuana, founded by Jimmy Morrison, 23, of
Muscatine.
Kaufmann urged people who want the law changed, including those with
fibromyalgia, cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and those with
Multiple Sclerosis -patients who say marijuana reduces their pain or
nausea - to be careful how they lobby their legislators.
"You are asking us to go into the fray, but we can't address your
issues without asking the tough questions," he said. "There is no
chance for this bill (which would legalize marijuana use for medical
purposes only) unless you shut the door and triple lock it" against
those who would prefer that Iowa approve marijuana for recreational
use, too.
"I'm the only legislator who showed up today. I'm here," he told a
crowd who shared with Kaufmann both their pain and their tears,
"because my mother suffered from fibromyalgia."
Lisa Jackson, 44, of Crawfordsville, also has fibromyalgia, a chronic
condition with symptoms that include pain, tenderness and stiffness
in the muscles and joints, and fatigue and anxiety.
She said that smoking marijuana has enabled her to "get out of bed,
raise 50 chickens, mow 2 1/2 acres and keep the kids fed and dressed.
To me that's a life I can be proud of."
She described a life before trying medicinal marijuana in which "my
family carried on around me, but without me."
A little more than two years ago, she said she was seated on her bed
holding her husband's gun, ready to take her own life. Then her
husband walked into the room, and the two had a heart-to-heart talk
about "how our lives had to change."
For her the most beneficial change was when she began smoking half an
ounce of marijuana each week.
"My children know I smoke and why," she said, her talk interrupted a
few times by tears. "In many ways they have paid a higher price than
I have."
Kaufmann said he got his first inkling of Iowans' strong support for
a change in the law during what he called a "listening post" event in
Clarence.
"It doesn't get much more conservative than Clarence," he said. "I
threw out (the topic of) medical marijuana and at least 90 percent of
them said they believed we should continue to have the
discussion."
"It's an idea," he added, "that you've convinced me needs to be
discussed (in the Legislature). We're still small enough (in Iowa)
that people talking to (legislators) can change our minds.
"Now," he said of the proposal, "we need to make it politically
viable."
After the film, Morrison talked about the prospects of following up
February's vote by the Iowa Board of Pharmacy to recommend that the
Legislature remove marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which by
definition have no medicinal use and a high probability of addiction.
Medical marijuana proposals died during the 2010 session. Morrison
said he and Jackson want to help form a study group that includes
patients, scientists, law enforcement officials and drug treatment
providers.
Kaufmann said he supports that idea, even if it's not appointed by
the Legislature.
"We read reports from task forces all the time," he said. "Sometimes
we turn them into bills."
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