Pubdate: Thu, 30 Oct 2003 Source: Toledo City Paper (OH) Copyright: 2003 Toledo City Paper Contact: http://www.toledocitypaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3132 Author: John Lasker Note: John Lasker is a TCP freelance writer. Cited: Ohio Patient Network http://www.ohiopatient.net/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Carano Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bob+Taft Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/state/oh/ (Ohio) POT FOR PATIENTS Oregon Man Says Time Is Right for Medicinal Marijuana in Ohio Medicinal marijuana use has been an issue of extensive legal and legislative wrangling in several, mostly Western, states, but if a Toledo-area activist has his way, the debate will extend to Ohio. Politicians, he argues, are the final obstacle to legalizing medical marijuana in Ohio. "Politicians are scared that if they show any compassion towards the medical use, their opponents will label them 'soft on drugs,'" says Jim White, the Oregon resident who authored the bill. "But the reality is, voters are more likely to support candidates who support medical use of cannabis." Members of Ohio Patient Net-work have been drafting a bill, for more than a year now, that would permit medicinal marijuana use. White, a father of two and a computer repair technician, is the nonprofit's vice president. In its three-year existence, OPN has become a formidable grass-roots effort promoting the legal use of medicinal marijuana. White says OPN has 600 members statewide and is seeking to gain the support of a large number of Ohioans already using medicinal marijuana, who are afraid to leave the proverbial closet. Yet, as the time nears to present what White calls the Ohio Medicinal Marijuana Act to the floors of the Statehouse in Columbus, medicinal marijuana proponents acknowledge Ohio is a long way from legalizing marijuana use for the sick and dying. Medicinal marijuana is sometimes prescribed for those who suffer from cancer, AIDS and a host of other ailments. OPN recently forwarded a draft of the bill to state Rep. Ken Carano, D-Youngstown. OPN is the lead public sponsor, and Carano is considered one of Ohio's few political office holders who would contemplate taking such a bill to the Statehouse, where war-on-drugs Republicans significantly outnumber Democrats. Gov. Bob Taft and his political allies' efforts to defeat a statewide drug treatment initiative last year, likely foreshadow how difficult it would be to pass medicinal marijuana legislation in Ohio. The group spent millions of taxpayer dollars to defeat Issue I, which would have authorized rehabilitation instead of prison for nonviolent drug-possession offenders. Proponents of Issue 1 at the time argued an elected official was trying to squash the electoral process, which is prohibited under state law. But Taft said his office was trying to protect Ohio citizens from what he deemed dangerous legislation, thus avoiding any sanctions. Nonetheless, Issue 1 was overwhelmingly defeated. "Our biggest obstacle is ignorance and fear," White says. "Most people -- and believe it or not -- most doctors, know very little about the medical benefits of cannabis. And it's not that the evidence is not there, it is." State Rep. Carano, a former teacher, says he does not advocate the use of marijuana for any reason but medicinal. Along with "a strong basis of medical fact," he says his instinct tells him many could benefit from medicinal marijuana. For instance, a White House-commissioned 1999 Institute of Medicine report concluded medicinal marijuana is beneficial for some patients. There are about 200 documented medical applications for marijuana, such as relieving chronic pain, stimulating appetite for those undergoing chemotherapy, easing eye pressure for glaucoma sufferers and decreasing spasms caused by multiple sclerosis. Opponents argue medicinal marijuana cures nothing. Carano says just getting the bill into committee at the Statehouse, and into a debate among both Republicans and Democrats, would be a small victory. "This bill goes nowhere if I can't (get) some Republicans on my side," says Carano, 58, a self-described "very liberal person." But Carano believes there are a number of moderate Republicans who, at least, are willing to listen. The opposition's major contention with the bill, says Carano, is the "control" issue. The issue's premise is whether or not medicinal marijuana can stay in the possession of patients and stay out of the hands of abusers. Carano recently told Statehouse reporters the bill's only chance might lie in how the marijuana is delivered --in this case, pill form alone. The statements apparently caught OPN members off guard, and they immediately corrected Carano. They have subsequently responded by saying the bill needs to allow for several different delivery methods. Deirdre Zoretic, director of patient advocacy for the OPN, says many patients found that a medicinal marijuana pill, such as Marinol, worsened their nausea. "Different patients need different methods of delivery," says Zoretic, who suffers from a nerve disease called reflex sympathetic dystrophy. "Whether that's ingesting it, a rub, a mist, or a product called the 'Volcano' (an inhaler-like apparatus available in England, where medicinal marijuana is legal)," she says, "I would like to keep the smoking method open, as well." Zoretic, who lives in Cleveland, says marijuana decreases the pain and nerve attacks associated with her condition. White and other OPN members say they have spoken to dozens of legislators who say they would go public with their endorsement of medicinal marijuana if a large number of their constituents showed support. But White says the public support is strong, and it's up to these same legislators to have some courage. "It's a shame because some of these patients are fighting for their lives, while politicians fight for a spot on next year's ballot," he says. Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a case brought by the Bush administration that sought to forbid California physicians from prescribing marijuana. The court's refusal was a clear victory for proponents, considering it also protects physicians in the eight other states that have legalized medicinal marijuana. Those are Alaska, Arizona, Oregon, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Nevada and Washington. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake