Pubdate: Wed, 26 Oct 2005
Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI)
Copyright: 2005 The Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.dailytribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579
Author: Michael P. McConnell, Daily Tribune Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

CITY TAKES NO ACTION TO BLUNT LEGAL POT PLAN

FERNDALE -- City Council has refused to pass a measure opposing a
ballot proposal to legalize marijuana for medical use.

Councilman Mike Lennon -- who is against Proposal D -- asked his
fellow elected officials to join him in a resolution against the
ballot proposal but failed to gain any support.

"The bottom line is that marijuana is illegal at this time," Lennon
said, "and I don't know if Ferndale is the place to start (to legalize
it). Maybe the state is."

Councilman Craig Covey, who supports city Proposal D, said Lennon
should have brought the issue up during the regular agenda of Monday's
City Council meeting rather than introduce it at the end when
officials make comments.

"Friends can disagree," Covey said.

Mayor Robert Porter has said a city ordinance to allow the use of
marijuana under a physician's direction still doesn't address the
illegality of the drug -- and of obtaining it.

However, Porter, Covey and Councilman T. Scott Galloway have said they
believe the marijuana proposal will probably pass. Galloway and Porter
have not taken a stand on the issue.

A similar proposal was approved in Detroit by 60 percent of voters
last year.

Donal O'Leary III, 19, is a Ferndale resident and University of
Michigan student who submitted the petitions to get the marijuana 
proposal on Ferndale's
ballot for the Nov. 8 election. O'Leary is working with Tim Beck who
organized the successful ballot in Detroit.

O'Leary attended Monday's council meeting with two residents who spoke
in favor of the proposal.

Peggy Thorp told city officials that her adult son used marijuana with
good results when he had to undergo chemotherapy three years ago for
leukemia. The marijuana stimulated his appetite and took some of the
edge off side effects of his chemo treatment, she added.

"It was a definite help for him," Thorp said.

Proposal D is drawing opposition from Ferndale Police Chief Michael
Kitchen and Oakland County Prosecutor's Office.

Kitchen and Deputy Prosecutor James Halushka both note that marijuana
is considered a dangerous drug by the American Medical Association and
other health-care groups.

Pro-marijuana endorsements come from former U.S. Surgeon General
Joycelyn Elders and television talk show host Montel Williams, who has
pushed for legalization since he began to use marijuana as an adjunct
to his treatment for multiple sclerosis.

Medical groups that support legalizing marijuana for medical use
include the New England Journal of Medicine and the American Nurses
Association.

The resolution that Lennon tried to introduce Monday was modeled on a
resolution the Michigan House of Representatives passed, 96-7, last
year against the medical use of marijuana without federal drug approval.

Lennon also said marijuana is a gateway drug and that teens who smoke
it are 85 times more likely to use cocaine.

While 10 states have laws allowing the medical use of marijuana,
federal law prohibits the sale and use of marijuana.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that federal law enforcement
officers are not precluded from arresting marijuana users and sellers
in states where the medical use of marijuana is allowed.