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Old 04-03-2007, 12:25 PM   #1
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Default WA: Weed for medicine: regulate the crop

Weed for medicine: regulate the crop
04.02.07|Seattle Times

In 1998, nearly 59 percent of the voters of Washington approved Initiative 698, legalizing marijuana for medical uses. But our medical-marijuana regime has problems, and the bill now working its way through the Legislature solves only the lesser parts of them.

The key to this issue is the acceptance that marijuana has been shown to control pain and to help seriously ill people keep down food and medicine. Both sponsors of Senate Bill 6032 — Sens. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, and Bob McCaslin, R-Spokane — have known people close to them who have used the drug in a medical way. This page supported I-698 as a measure to alleviate human suffering, and supports a slight broadening of the allowable uses. We oppose the general legalization of marijuana, but admit its medicinal effects.

Unfortunately, the federal law has been applied by a long string of U.S. attorneys general to allow no uses of marijuana. Because of that, the state cannot do what it really should, which is to regulate the growing, testing, packaging and sale of cannabis as a prescription drug.

Instead, our voter-written state law disingenuously instructs police to ignore the possession of a 60-day supply by certain sick people, without saying how much of a supply that is or how they are supposed to get it.

SB 6032 would have the state Department of Health define a presumptive 60-day supply, telling police to ignore amounts of no more than that if held by a certified patient. The bill would tell police to ignore growing operations, providing each operation served one certified patient only.

Patient advocates say these proposals are too restrictive. The supply ought to be set by the doctor, and the law ought to allow two or more patients to get medication from the same source.

Legislators should do their best for these patients, who are too sick to worry over the details. They should pass the best bill they can.
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Old 04-03-2007, 07:14 PM   #2
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The bill would tell police to ignore growing operations, providing each operation served one certified patient only.
How crazy it that? Forcing each patient or caregiver to supply only one person is the least efficient possible way to supply the meds that people need. Our entire economy is based on efficiencies of scale: you can produce a better product for less money when you produce a lot of it. You can afford real, full-time expertise rather than chancy amateur efforts. You can afford the best equipment rather than what an individual can scrape together.

One of the things I really like about the new New Mexico medical marijuana law is that it's the first one that provides for production and distribution of the product. It's the way of the future.
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