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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Gov Andrew Cuomo Studying Legalizing Medical Marijuana
Title:US NY: Gov Andrew Cuomo Studying Legalizing Medical Marijuana
Published On:2011-07-23
Source:Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY)
Fetched On:2011-07-27 06:00:32
GOV. ANDREW CUOMO STUDYING LEGALIZING MEDICAL MARIJUANA

ALBANY -- After a legislative session with no progress on legalizing
medical marijuana, advocates are hoping that the New Jersey
governor's actions last week and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's
statement that he is studying the issue will lead to success.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, said his state would
move forward with its medical-marijuana act, a reversal from his
position last month. He said at the time that he had concerns the
state legislation conflicts with federal law and practice.

The U.S. Justice Department earlier this month said it is focused on
large-scale commercial providers.

Cuomo, a Democrat, has not supported medical marijuana in the past,
and he said last week he has not changed his position.

He did, however, leave the door open on the issue.

"We have proponents of the policy. I know New Jersey's looking at it.
We have opponents of the policy," he said. "We're talking to both
sides of the issue, if you will, and we're reviewing it, but we don't
have a final position."

The governor said that while he hasn't changed his stance, "we're
always learning and listening and talking and growing, we hope."

New Jersey became the 16th state to legalize medical marijuana under
legislation signed by Christie's predecessor.

Legislation to allow patients with debilitating illnesses to use
marijuana if they are registered with the state and receive a
prescription from their physician has passed the Assembly before but
never the Senate.

Under the bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Richard Gottfried and Sen.
Thomas Duane, both Manhattan Democrats, hospitals and pharmacies
would do the bulk of the dispensing. The maximum amount that could be
dispensed would be 2.5 ounces.

"The big obstacle continues to be getting a couple more votes in the
state Senate to enable it to pass," Gottfried said.

The Democrat-controlled Assembly didn't vote on the bill this year,
only because of the difficulty in getting it through the GOP-led Senate.

Getting the support of the governor would help immensely, said
Gottfried, adding that he has been in conversations on the matter
with members of Cuomo's administration who are reviewing the issue.

"My gut feeling or prediction is that when that's done, he will
support legislation because I think the merits are overwhelmingly in
support and I think certainly, to the extent he relies on health
(professionals') viewpoints, I think it's a very clear decision,"
Gottfried said.

He said the governor should "focus on the thousands of New Yorkers
who are needlessly suffering from life-endangering and debilitating
conditions whose lives could be made more tolerable and longer if we
would join the other states that allow medical use."

If the governor gets behind medical marijuana, "it can make all the
difference in the world," said Gabriel Sayegh, New York director of
the Drug Policy Alliance.

But the legislation has significant opponents, including the state
Conservative Party, which held sway in the recent Senate vote to
approve same-sex marriage by threatening not to re-endorse any
Republicans who voted yes. Four of them voted yes anyway.

"I don't see how marijuana helps anybody with any kind of sickness,"
said Michael Long, head of the Conservative Party. "There's plenty of
prescribed drugs that people can take when they are critically ill."

He said if New York adopted a medical-marijuana law, it would be in
conflict with the federal law that marijuana is an illegal drug.
Legalizing it would only add to law enforcement problems, he said.

"I am telling you that it will create an enforcement nightmare.
There'll be no control over it," Long said.

Gottfried said he thinks Christie's move confirms what has been clear
since the Obama administration and even under the Bush
administration, "that entities that produce or dispense in clear
compliance with state law are not going to be interfered with by the
federal government and the federal government has never gone after
individual patients."

Sayegh said if the legislation passed, New York would have one of the
most conservative medical marijuana laws in the country.
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