Pubdate: Fri, 20 Dec 2002
Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU)
Copyright: 2002 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc.
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274
Author: Sidhartha Banerjee, The Gazette

CLUB'S POT TOO PRICEY, CRITICS SAY

Internet Sales Not Seen As Panacea Muscular Dystrophy Patient Says Many Who 
Need Drug Are On Welfare, Fixed Incomes To Enrich Dope Peddlers, Not Help 
Sufferers

Claude Messier applauded the new Web site launched by the Marijuana Party 
of Canada yesterday to sell pot over the Internet. But, he admitted, it 
will do little to answer the problem of accessibility for those in need of 
medicinal marijuana.

Messier, 36, is a muscular dystrophy patient who lives in constant pain. He 
smokes on average about 3 grams of pot a day - roughly $800 worth a month.

While Messier, who was a defence witness at the drug-trafficking trial of 
Marc St-Maurice and Alexandre Neron, was happy for the two, he said it's 
still up to the government to come up with a feasible plan to distribute 
marijuana.

"The Web site is not a bad idea, but for me it would just be too 
expensive," Messier said in an interview at the St. Charles Borromee 
long-term care facility on Rene-Levesque Blvd., where he lives. "You also 
have to remember most people who need medicinal marijuana are on welfare 
and have fixed incomes and can't afford those prices."

It means Messier, who has been granted an exemption under Article 56, has 
to find other ways of getting his marijuana - and usually, that means 
illegally.

Messier says he's lucky. Thanks to the royalties from a published book and 
talks he gives in public, he's able to meet some of the costs.

But most who need medicinal marijuana simply can't afford it and the Web 
site isn't going to change that, said Jim Wakeford, the first person in 
Canada granted permission to smoke pot for medicinal purposes.

"If they can't afford to buy the marijuana, they can't afford to be on the 
Web," Wakeford told The Gazette yesterday in a telephone interview from 
British Columbia. "It's just more money for the pot peddlers."

Wakeford, 58, who has full-blown AIDS, is due in court early next year on 
charges of marijuana trafficking. It is alleged that he gave marijuana away 
to severely ill patients.

He called yesterday's court decision in Montreal a bitter irony, given the 
fact he is standing trial for giving marijuana away, not selling it.

Wakeford admits he's not a great fan of Compassion Clubs because, he says, 
they charge just as much as on the street.

"The people who use them are being used," Wakeford said. "I personally 
can't afford those clubs and they are not an option for me or most people I 
know."

There have been many solutions, but few answers. Messier said he'd like to 
see pot seized by police handed over to the sick.

And William Robert Palmer, an AIDS patient from Toronto who also testified 
for the defence, said he'd like to see a network of legal clubs across the 
country.

"I'm pleased with the decision, but the question is: 'Are you going to get 
arrested as soon as they open up (today) because they still don't have a 
license to sell?' " said Palmer.

Said Wakeford: "The government has granted us exemptions and then turned us 
loose on the black market. We have no alternative - it's either that or 
live in anguish and starve."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom