News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Editorial: Seeing Through The Smoke |
Title: | US OR: Editorial: Seeing Through The Smoke |
Published On: | 2011-06-10 |
Source: | Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) |
Fetched On: | 2011-06-12 06:02:05 |
SEEING THROUGH THE SMOKE
Dwight Holton Has Initiated an Important Conversation About Medical
Marijuana
Oregon's medical marijuana law is intentionally ambiguous, leaving
plenty of room for abuse. Dwight Holton, U.S. Attorney for Oregon, and
33 of the state's district attorneys have stepped in to fill that
void, serving notice that marijuana dispensaries, so-called cannabis
clubs, remain illegal in Oregon.
It's about time someone took action on the increasing number of
medical marijuana dispensaries. The dispensaries are ignoring both the
law and the will of Oregonians, who voted in November to defeat
Measure 74, which would have legalized state-regulated
dispensaries.
Cannabis clubs are places where licensed medical marijuana users can
meet and smoke together. Yet many of the clubs are also selling
marijuana, according to Holton -- illegal under both state and federal
law. A Google search of "medical marijuana dispensaries Oregon"
provides about half a million results, with some websites listing
addresses and "weed menus" for various clubs. There's always been
controversy about where card holders get their marijuana, and for the
sick and elderly, dispensaries provide important access. But it is
difficult to distinguish which clubs are solely attempting to provide
medicine and which are marketing to recreational users.
One signature was missing from the notice -- Mike Schrunk's, the
district attorney from Multnomah County. In a letter to Holton, he
wrote that, "the problem must await other solutions." He's right that
it will take more than a strongly worded letter to change this. Some
landlords will terminate the leases on the dispensaries. However, some
will continue to allow the clubs to be tenants, especially if the
clubs claim they are not selling marijuana and thus not technically
violating the law.
Of course, technical violations of the law may not really be the issue
here. The original medical marijuana law was full of flaws. Lawmakers
who are inclined to try to fix it could start with age restrictions on
who can hold a card. Right now, anyone, including teenagers, can
apply. A study done by Oregon Partnership found, for example, that 35
percent of students at Wilson High School and 46 percent at Marshall
High School knew someone with a card.
The current law also gives growers too much access: Individuals can
possess approximately $30,000 worth of marijuana at any given time.
Licensed users can designate someone else to grow their medicinal
marijuana, and each grower could have 6 pounds of marijuana (1.5
pounds per user, 4 users maximum).
Opponents of the law point out, too, that practices surrounding
medical marijuana are, well, vague, which makes it difficult to ensure
marijuana is going to be used as medicine and not recreationally.
Oregon lawmakers need to work with doctors to set dose limits.
Holton has done a good job in pointing to the proliferation of
marijuana dispensaries, which may help nip it in the bud, so to speak.
But, if Oregon is to continue allowing medical marijuana, then, at
least, legislators must work harder to tighten up the rules.
Dwight Holton Has Initiated an Important Conversation About Medical
Marijuana
Oregon's medical marijuana law is intentionally ambiguous, leaving
plenty of room for abuse. Dwight Holton, U.S. Attorney for Oregon, and
33 of the state's district attorneys have stepped in to fill that
void, serving notice that marijuana dispensaries, so-called cannabis
clubs, remain illegal in Oregon.
It's about time someone took action on the increasing number of
medical marijuana dispensaries. The dispensaries are ignoring both the
law and the will of Oregonians, who voted in November to defeat
Measure 74, which would have legalized state-regulated
dispensaries.
Cannabis clubs are places where licensed medical marijuana users can
meet and smoke together. Yet many of the clubs are also selling
marijuana, according to Holton -- illegal under both state and federal
law. A Google search of "medical marijuana dispensaries Oregon"
provides about half a million results, with some websites listing
addresses and "weed menus" for various clubs. There's always been
controversy about where card holders get their marijuana, and for the
sick and elderly, dispensaries provide important access. But it is
difficult to distinguish which clubs are solely attempting to provide
medicine and which are marketing to recreational users.
One signature was missing from the notice -- Mike Schrunk's, the
district attorney from Multnomah County. In a letter to Holton, he
wrote that, "the problem must await other solutions." He's right that
it will take more than a strongly worded letter to change this. Some
landlords will terminate the leases on the dispensaries. However, some
will continue to allow the clubs to be tenants, especially if the
clubs claim they are not selling marijuana and thus not technically
violating the law.
Of course, technical violations of the law may not really be the issue
here. The original medical marijuana law was full of flaws. Lawmakers
who are inclined to try to fix it could start with age restrictions on
who can hold a card. Right now, anyone, including teenagers, can
apply. A study done by Oregon Partnership found, for example, that 35
percent of students at Wilson High School and 46 percent at Marshall
High School knew someone with a card.
The current law also gives growers too much access: Individuals can
possess approximately $30,000 worth of marijuana at any given time.
Licensed users can designate someone else to grow their medicinal
marijuana, and each grower could have 6 pounds of marijuana (1.5
pounds per user, 4 users maximum).
Opponents of the law point out, too, that practices surrounding
medical marijuana are, well, vague, which makes it difficult to ensure
marijuana is going to be used as medicine and not recreationally.
Oregon lawmakers need to work with doctors to set dose limits.
Holton has done a good job in pointing to the proliferation of
marijuana dispensaries, which may help nip it in the bud, so to speak.
But, if Oregon is to continue allowing medical marijuana, then, at
least, legislators must work harder to tighten up the rules.
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