cannabisnews.com: Panel Backs Medical Pot Supply Plan





Panel Backs Medical Pot Supply Plan
Posted by FoM on May 03, 2001 at 06:25:46 PT
By Gregory Kesich, Portland Press Herald Writer
Source: Press Herald
A plan to defy federal law and give marijuana to people with cancer, AIDS and other diseases received overwhelming support from a legislative panel Wednesday. By a vote of 15-1, members of the Criminal Justice and Health and Human Services committees endorsed a bill to create a pilot distribution system for what is still an illegal drug.The lawmakers said they were simply responding to the voters, who approved decriminalizing the cultivation and possession of limited amounts of medical marijuana for qualified people in a 1999 referendum.
"If I was charged with figuring out whether I think this is a good idea, I don't think that I would. But that is not our charge," said Rep. Robert Nutting, R-Oakland, who voted in favor of the bill. "The people of the state of Maine have told us what they want and they told us to make this work."At a public hearing earlier this month, patients told legislators that Maine's medical marijuana law was an empty promise because many of them were too sick or otherwise unable to grow marijuana and were left to find their own supply on the illegal drug market.The bill would create a single not-for-profit distribution center as a pilot program. The center would be governed by a community board, including the local county sheriff, and would receive no government funding.The center would grow marijuana for qualified recipients and offer cultivation equipment and growing advice to others.While the committee considered the bill, the U.S. Supreme Court is deliberating a California case that could have an impact on the Legislature's work. The court has been asked to determine whether people who work in medical marijuana distribution centers have a defense if they are prosecuted for drug dealing under federal law. A decision is expected this month.Assistant Attorney General James Cameron urged Maine legislators to wait until that case is decided before writing the final draft of their bill."You should try to craft this bill so it will work," he advised. "The fear is that people will put a lot of work into this and the federal government will slap an injunction on it and shut it down."The bill has more opposition than appeared Wednesday. Representatives of the King administration testified against the bill at the public hearing, and repeated their opposition Wednesday.Dr. Dora Mills, director of the state Bureau of Health, said distributing medical marijuana could result in an increase in illegal trafficking. She also said there is conflicting research about the effectiveness of the drug, and the side-effects it produces. She said smoking the drug could create more health problems than it solves for very sick patients.Mills, who along with Gov. Angus King opposed the medical marijuana referendum, said the vote put no responsibility on the state to distribute marijuana. "If it was the intent of the referendum to require the state to set up a distribution system, they should have said so," Mills said. "If they had, the vote may have been different."Rep. James Tobin, R-Dexter, the bill's lone opponent on the committee Wednesday, said he thought the issue should be decided on the federal level and fears the state could lose federal law enforcement grants if it defies Washington on this matter.Rep. Thomas Kane, D-Saco, predicted the bill would pass both houses of the Legislature and would be signed by King. "The reason we are here is because the people of the state of Maine said they wanted us to do this," he said. "Many (legislators) had other ideas and reservations, but that referendum was overwhelming."Source: Portland Press Herald (ME) Author: Gregory Kesich, Portland Press Herald WriterPublished: Thursday, May 3, 2001Copyright: 2001 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc. Contact: letters pressherald.com Website: http://www.portland.com/ Related Articles & Web Site:Mainers For Medical Rightshttp://www.mainers.org/Groups Oppose Pot Distribution Planhttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread9516.shtmlControl Medical Marijuanahttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread9512.shtmlState's Medical Marijuana Plan Hits Snaghttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread9506.shtml
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Comment #1 posted by sm247 on May 03, 2001 at 20:31:48 PT
Agrees
Mills, who along with Gov. Angus King opposed the medical marijuana referendum, said the vote put no   responsibility on the state to distribute marijuana.    "If it was the intent of the referendum to require the state to set up a distribution system, they should have said so,"   Mills said. "If they had, the vote may have been different."I agree make the people "grow their own" maybe an exeption for distibuting to those too sick to care for their own plants.
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