News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Editorial: End Delays For Medical Marijuana |
Title: | US NJ: Editorial: End Delays For Medical Marijuana |
Published On: | 2010-07-31 |
Source: | Herald News (West Paterson, NJ) |
Fetched On: | 2010-08-02 03:02:15 |
END DELAYS FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA
STOP BLOWING smoke. It's time to inhale. Cancer patients, people with
AIDS, victims of Lou Gehrig's disease and others have waited long
enough. They were supposed to be allowed to smoke medical marijuana
starting in October. Thirteen other states already allow it, and New
Jersey became the 14th back in January, when the Legislature passed
the nation's strictest law and then-Gov. Jon Corzine signed it.
But then Governor Christie pushed back the start date to January 2011,
in a move befitting a prosecutor, because he wanted "to do it the
right way," his spokesman said.
The right way meant Rutgers University should oversee growing it and
16 teaching hospitals should sell it, to tightly control the process.
But Rutgers officials said last week that the school could not risk
losing more than $500 million in federal funding to grow medical
marijuana. The university was not convinced that its new career as a
marijuana farmer would be liability-free.
The university-hospital axis might have looked like a good plan on
paper, but it was not a good plan in reality. The University of
Mississippi is the only state school approved by the federal
government to grow marijuana, and the crops are produced solely for
research. It is a federal crime to possess, sell, smoke or eat
marijuana. Unless a university gets an ironclad promise the feds will
overlook its illegal activities, it takes a huge risk sanctioning them.
Why the state had to go down this road is a mystery. New Jersey's
medical marijuana law already has provisions for establishing
non-profit alternative treatment centers throughout the state to grow
and provide medicinal marijuana. Unlike Rutgers, these centers are not
in danger of losing federal funding. And other states have made
similar arrangements.
In response to Rutgers' decision last week, Christie's spokesman said,
"... as we've said all along, we've been considering other options
beyond the Rutgers plan." Stop. The option is right here, in the law.
New Jersey has wasted too much time already. It must not ask for yet
another extension, and it must not flop around looking for
alternatives. Lack of a concrete plan at this late date is torture to
people desperate to ease their suffering, as is worrying that the law
will be delayed.
These false starts are inhumane. The medical marijuana law was written
to ease, not create, pain. Enact it as originally written.
STOP BLOWING smoke. It's time to inhale. Cancer patients, people with
AIDS, victims of Lou Gehrig's disease and others have waited long
enough. They were supposed to be allowed to smoke medical marijuana
starting in October. Thirteen other states already allow it, and New
Jersey became the 14th back in January, when the Legislature passed
the nation's strictest law and then-Gov. Jon Corzine signed it.
But then Governor Christie pushed back the start date to January 2011,
in a move befitting a prosecutor, because he wanted "to do it the
right way," his spokesman said.
The right way meant Rutgers University should oversee growing it and
16 teaching hospitals should sell it, to tightly control the process.
But Rutgers officials said last week that the school could not risk
losing more than $500 million in federal funding to grow medical
marijuana. The university was not convinced that its new career as a
marijuana farmer would be liability-free.
The university-hospital axis might have looked like a good plan on
paper, but it was not a good plan in reality. The University of
Mississippi is the only state school approved by the federal
government to grow marijuana, and the crops are produced solely for
research. It is a federal crime to possess, sell, smoke or eat
marijuana. Unless a university gets an ironclad promise the feds will
overlook its illegal activities, it takes a huge risk sanctioning them.
Why the state had to go down this road is a mystery. New Jersey's
medical marijuana law already has provisions for establishing
non-profit alternative treatment centers throughout the state to grow
and provide medicinal marijuana. Unlike Rutgers, these centers are not
in danger of losing federal funding. And other states have made
similar arrangements.
In response to Rutgers' decision last week, Christie's spokesman said,
"... as we've said all along, we've been considering other options
beyond the Rutgers plan." Stop. The option is right here, in the law.
New Jersey has wasted too much time already. It must not ask for yet
another extension, and it must not flop around looking for
alternatives. Lack of a concrete plan at this late date is torture to
people desperate to ease their suffering, as is worrying that the law
will be delayed.
These false starts are inhumane. The medical marijuana law was written
to ease, not create, pain. Enact it as originally written.
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