Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jan 2008
Source: East Valley Tribune (AZ)
Copyright: 2008 East Valley Tribune.
Contact:  http://www.eastvalleytribune.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2708
Author: Howard Fischer, Capitol Media Services
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

INITIATIVE WOULD MAKE MARIJUANA LEGAL FOR ILL

Arizona voters may get a chance this year to do what they thought 
they were doing in 1996: allow people who are ill to possess and use 
marijuana legally.

An initiative being crafted would spell out that individuals who are 
certified by their doctors as needing the drug would be able to 
possess small amounts -- the details are still being worked out -- 
without running afoul of state law. They also would be able to grow 
their own drugs.

Backers, organized as the Arizona Medical Marijuana Policy Project, 
have until July 3 to get the 153,365 signatures necessary to put the 
measure on the November ballot.

Financing for the initiative is coming from the national Marijuana 
Policy Project which bills itself as the largest marijuana policy 
reform organization in the country. It already has kicked in $10,000.

That organization is no stranger to state initiatives: It also was 
behind a 2006 Nevada ballot measure to decriminalize marijuana and 
instead regulate and tax it. But that initiative picked up just 44 
percent of the vote.

Two years earlier, though, it financed a successful medical 
initiative in Montana.

Dan Bernath, a spokesman for the national group, said it appears 
voters are more willing to allow people who are ill to use marijuana 
than to make its possession legal for everyone. That has proven to be 
the case in Arizona, where by a 2-1 margin voters in 1996 approved a 
law allowing doctors to prescribe marijuana -- and various other 
illegal drugs -- to patients who are seriously or terminally ill.

That law was ratified again two years later by voters after state 
legislators attempted to partially repeal it.

But a 2002 initiative, which included a provision to reduce the 
penalty for possession of up to 2 ounces to a fine, picked up just 43 
percent of the vote.

The new initiative comes because the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency 
effectively quashed the 1996 law by threatening to revoke all 
prescription-writing privileges of any physician who prescribed 
otherwise illegal drugs to their Arizona patients. The result is no 
Arizona doctor has written such a prescription.

Alternate language for this measure, still being worked out, would 
allow doctors to "recommend" marijuana.

That distinction is crucial: The U.S. Supreme Court, in a historic 
2003 ruling, blocked the DEA from going after California doctors who, 
using that state's law, recommend a patient use marijuana.

That still leaves the question of how patients are supposed to get 
the drugs in the first place. Courts have allowed agents to pursue 
suppliers. And some of the "dispensaries" in California have been raided.

Bernath said that is why states which have adopted medical marijuana 
laws since California allow patients or a "designated caregiver" to 
grow a set amount of the drug.

"This keeps it small enough that the federal government doesn't turn 
its attention to those kind of things," he said.

That defeated 2002 initiative attempted to deal with the supply 
problem by allowing anyone with a doctor's recommendation to get up 
to 2 ounces of marijuana, free, each month from the state Department 
of Public Safety, which presumably would have obtained its supply 
from drugs seized from those who lack the necessary state permission.

That initiative was opposed by Janet Napolitano, then the state 
attorney general and, at the time, a candidate for governor, despite 
her admission of having indulged.

"I experimented in college a little bit and regret doing it," she 
said at the time. "When you're in college you do a lot of dumb stuff." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake