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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MT: Column: 3 Medical Marijuana Reform Options Still Alive
Title:US MT: Column: 3 Medical Marijuana Reform Options Still Alive
Published On:2011-04-02
Source:Ravalli Republic (Hamilton, MT)
Fetched On:2011-04-04 19:53:07
3 MEDICAL MARIJUANA REFORM OPTIONS STILL ALIVE IN MONTANA LEGISLATURE

HELENA - With just three weeks left in the 2011 legislative session,
it's as unclear now as it was three months ago what lawmakers finally
will do with the difficult medical marijuana issue.

Despite hundreds of hours of work on the issue by many legislators,
the options remain the same as they were in January. Legislators are
torn over how to fix an industry that many politicians from both sides
believe has careened out of control.

Here's a look at the options still alive:

Repeal: House Bill 161 by House Speaker Mike Milburn, R-Cascade,
would repeal the law that Montana voters passed by initiative in 2004.

What would it do? It would ban all legal use of medical marijuana on
July 1. Illegal growing and selling operations also would be closed in
three months.

Where's the bill? It's passed both chambers, but the Senate amended
it. If the House accepts the Senate amendments, HB161 will go directly
to Gov. Brian Schweitzer for his signature or veto. If the House
rejects the Senate amendments, the bill goes to a conference committee
to iron out differences.

Pros? Backers say the bill rids Montana of what one lawmaker has
called a "scourge" on the state. They say it ends a system that has
made a mockery of the law, with 28,300 cardholders now able to use
medical marijuana. Medicinal pot dispensaries no longer would be near
schools, so it would be harder for this marijuana to slip it way into
schools.

Cons? While some have abused medical marijuana, opponents say the herb
has also helped treat many seriously and terminally ill people after
narcotics prescribed by doctors didn't. Illegal pot was here long
before medical marijuana was legalized and will still be here if it's
banned. Some 30,000 medical marijuana cardholders, caregivers and
growers would immediately become criminals if they kept using or
growing the product. A growing marijuana industry would be eliminated,
putting up to 2,000 people out of work.

Who's for it? A majority of House Republicans and Senate
Republicans.

Who's against it? Most Democrats in both houses. Although HB161 passed
the Senate, it was clearly a second choice for most senators who favor
a repeal and overhaul bill that was stalled.

Chances? Hard to say. Schweitzer has said he wants to see the medical
marijuana law fix, not repealed. An outright or amendatory veto may be
likely.

Repeal and reform: SB434 by Sen. Jeff Essmann, R-Billings, on behalf
of a subcommittee that came up with the bill last month.

What would it do? It also repeals the current law July 1, but sets up
a new system with much stricter regulations and licensing
requirements. Patients claiming they suffer from severe and chronic
pain would need to see their primary care physician at least four
times in six months. A second doctor who is a pain specialist would
have to concur before these patients could obtain medical marijuana
cards. Growing operations would become nonprofit operations.

Where's the bill? It passed the Senate and the House accepted it late
by suspending the rules. Milburn has assigned it to the House Human
Services Committee, where other bills to keep medical marijuana legal
but tighten restrictions have languished.

Pros? Backers say it would set up a system so that legitimate,
seriously ill people still could obtain medical marijuana, but others
couldn't. Essmann's goal is to tamp down the number of total marijuana
cardholders to less than 2,000 from the current 28,300.

Cons? No agency wants the task of regulating medical marijuana.
Already in SB423, that task has shuffled around from the Public
Service Commission to the Department of Agriculture and now the
Department of Labor and Industry. Some opponents believe SB423 is too
strict and that many sick people couldn't afford the additional doctor
visits to confirm what they already know is wrong with them. Repeal
advocates think it's not tough enough.

Who's for it? Those who don't want repeal, but believe this is the
best remaining option, even if they don't like everything in SB423.

Who's against it? Those who want repeal.

Chances? The question is whether it will ever see the light of day on
the House floor. The House might sit on it until its leaders sees what
happens to Milburn's repeal bill. It's too early to say if Schweitzer
would sign it.

Put in on the ballot again: HB175 by Rep. Keith Regier, R-Kalispell,
would let voters decide in November 2012 whether to repeal or keep
whatever the current medical marijuana law is at the end of this session.

Where's the bill? It has passed the House and will be heard in the
Senate.

Pros: It would let Montana voters decide the issue, just as they did
on medical marijuana in 2004.

Cons: It does nothing for next 20 months so the medical marijuana
status quo would remain in place in Montana.

Who's for it: It's a fallback position for most people if all other
options fail. A number of legislators believe that only the voters
have the right to repeal a voter-passed law.

Who's against it? The people who say that something needs to be done
now, or Montana will see 40,000 cardholders by November 2012. They
also worry about how much money would national marijuana groups would
dump into Montana for that campaign.

Chances? It's hard to say. If all else fails, this is a safe backup
position. The election always could be moved up to this year, although
special elections are costly. As a referendum, the bill wouldn't go to
the governor.
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