Pubdate: Wed, 24 Aug 2005
Source: North Bay Bohemian, The (CA)
Copyright: 2005 Metro Publishing Inc.
Contact:  http://www.bohemian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1753
Author: Chip McAuley
Cited: Marijuana Policy Project ( www.mpp.org )
Cited: Sonoma Alliance for Medicinal Marijuana ( www.samm.net/ )
Cited: Drug Enforcement Administration ( www.dea.gov )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

CLUB CARDS MEMBERSHIP HAS ITS PERKS--AND PERILS--WHEN IT COMES TO
MEDICAL MARIJUANA

Beginning in October, when medical marijuana smokers get carded by
state and local law enforcement, they won't be arrested. It's all part
of a new state-sanctioned pot card program through the Sonoma County
Health Department. However, dope smokers can still expect to get
thrown away by federal officials who refuse to acknowledge
California's Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, that
allows folks to put it in their pipe and smoke it--for medical
reasons. The card program seems apt to fuel the flames of the ongoing
controversy that has plagued the medicinal marijuana movement.

With legal issues still hampering full implementation of marijuana-as-
medicine, it remains unclear how many of an estimated 3,000 Sonoma
County residents will actually sign up for the voluntary program--a
program that brings with it the threat of exposing users to both the
feds and their neighbors.

According to county officials, federal authorities would need a court
order to access the confidential information. Deputy health officer
Leigh Hall says the program will go before the Sonoma County Board of
Supervisors in September before its likely implementation.

"There is no real way for public health officials to track the number
of medicinal marijuana users," says Hall. "This is the first time such
a system will be in place. It's voluntary. It's also scary for some
people. Even with the federal issues, some people still may not want
to use the program. However, we will be providing state-mandated cards
for people who are interested."

The local program will mirror a pot card program that started earlier
this year in Mendocino County.

Indeed, pot-friendly Mendocino County first implemented a medicinal
cannabis program through the sheriff's department after the passage of
Proposition 215 in 1996, touting approximately 1,200 registered users.
Intended to replace the system through the sheriff's department, with
its inference of discipline, a new program started in May through the
Mendocino County Public Health Department and has issued 60 cards to
date.

"It's a little too early to tell if the program's been successful,"
says Dan Taylor, assistant director of public health for Mendocino
County. "Sure, there are potential applicants who have concerns about
issues surrounding federal laws, but it's important to remember that
the card is optional."

While the sheriff's department will no longer issue cards, the old IDs
are good through December 2006--but only in Mendocino County.

In Sonoma County, supervisors are still waiting for their official
briefing on the program. Second District supervisor Mike Kerns says
the medicinal marijuana card program sounded like a "good idea."

Kerns, a former police sergeant for the City of Petaluma, says the
initial passage of Proposition 215 was problematic for law
enforcement. "When Proposition 215 passed, there were few guidelines
on how such a system would work. This new ID program seems like a step
in the right direction to enable those patients who need it to use it
in a legal manner," says Kerns.

"Some people may be reluctant to sign up for the program because it is
still against federal law," he adds.

"We're definitely going to take permission slips from doctors," says
Santa Rosa mayor Jane Bender. "I think we need to work in concert with
the county and other municipalities on the card program as well.
Having a unified voice will be important."

This latest progress toward mainstreaming marijuana-as-medicine comes
after years of effort by local cannabis clubs to legitimize themselves
and their missions in the face of antidrug opposition and the
erroneous belief that clubs proliferate weed for nonmedical uses--
claims that have never been substantiated.

The drug has been indicated in the treatment of AIDS, glaucoma,
cancer, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and chronic pain, according to
the Marijuana Policy Project.

"We look forward to a time when patients can obtain marijuana in a
safe and affordable manner without fear of threat of prosecution by
the federal government," say representatives of the Sonoma Alliance
for Medicinal Marijuana on its website (www.samm.net).

"We're all for the state card. If the county decides to go with the
program, we support it," says the founder of Marvin's Gardens, a
cannabis club in Guerneville who wished, for legal reasons, to remain
anonymous.

"It's going to be a mixed bag," says Doc Knapp, spokesperson for SAMM,
about local response to the program. On balance, Knapp expects the
results to be positive and to encounter no interference from the DEA,
which already has lists of many medicinal marijuana users. Having
spoken with business leaders and elected officials, Knapp says that he
doubts if SAMM will participate in the program. In fact, large groups
of people, including teachers, nurses and others, he says, may feel
vulnerable about having information about medicinal marijuana use on
record in addition to high-profile locals.

As long as the feds are kept at bay, membership in the pot card
program will definitely have its privileges. 
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