Pubdate: Thu, 26 Apr 2001 Source: Bangor Daily News (ME) Copyright: 2001 Bangor Daily News Inc. Contact: http://www.bangornews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/40 Author: Joseph L. Rogers Note: Joseph L. Rogers is the chief of police in Hampden. CONTROL MEDICAL MARIJUANA In 1999, a citizen's initiative on medical marijuana was passed by the voters of Maine. Once enacted it allowed qualifying individuals suffering from a number of afflictions (cancer, glaucoma, HIV, to name a few) to grow, possess and use marijuana to help address the discomfort associated with the disease and/or treatment of the disease. The law provided for the qualifying individual or the caregiver for the qualifying individual to possess up to six marijuana plants, three mature and three immature plants. Also, the caregiver could be the caregiver for a number of qualifying individuals and could legally possess the corresponding number of marijuana plants. Without debating the public policy benefits or pitfalls of medical marijuana since the passage of the citizen's initiative made such a debate moot, the conundrum is the distribution of the product. How do qualifying individuals obtain the product? What oversight is appropriate? Should there be any quality control? How can law enforcement continue their drug enforcement activities without infringing upon qualifying individuals' ability to possess marijuana? A task force was formed more than a year ago to address the problem of distribution of medical marijuana. The group consisted of representatives of all interested factions in the medical marijuana debate: legislators, attorneys, law enforcement, advocates for medical marijuana and qualifying individuals. The task force was unable to reach consensus and disbanded. The distribution question needs to be resolved. The needs and well-being of qualified individuals and the needs of law enforcement in carrying out their mission to protect everyone within the state of Maine must be considered. Marijuana distribution centers have been mentioned as a possible solution and have been utilized in California. There is proposed legislation in Augusta that would allow distribution centers to operate in Maine. The alternative would be individual cultivation of marijuana that could allow hundreds of people to grow marijuana. Marijuana distribution centers would limit the number of outlets where qualified individuals could obtain the product. Limiting the number of outlets would make oversight much more effective and hopefully would limit opportunities for nonqualified people to obtain marijuana under the medical exemption. Users of medical marijuana would have a readily available source if the need arose to utilize the product. The product itself could be standardized and more uniform with a limited number of growers providing the product. State oversight of the medical marijuana distribution and cultivation process makes much more sense than allowing qualified individuals or caregivers to grow and distribute medical marijuana. Every other drug has state and/or federal oversight to some degree and so it should be with medical marijuana. One stumbling block in the state taking this position is the possibility of jeopardizing federal funding of our drug enforcement, education and treatment efforts. California, to date, has not forfeited any federal funding despite the fact that distribution centers are currently in operation. Advocating state of Maine oversight of medical marijuana distribution centers is not an abdication of our role in the enfor cement of drug laws. Federal funding is an important revenue source for carrying out drug enforcement and that funding must remain intact so that we may carry forward this mission. Medical marijuana is legal in Maine. We must decide what is the most efficient and effective way to control medical marijuana and have it distributed only to those who are legally entitled to obtain the substance. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom