Pubdate: Fri, 1 Feb 2008
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2008 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact:  http://www.starbulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/196
Author: Helen Altonn
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

LAWMAKER ADDRESSING MEDICAL MARIJUANA

Although marijuana for medical purposes is legal in Hawaii, patients 
authorized to use the plant are being hassled by law enforcement 
agencies and others, said Maui Rep. Joe Bertram III.

The major problem is patient access to marijuana, a gray area in the 
seven-year-old law, Bertram (D, Makena-Kihei) said yesterday, 
announcing legislation to "tighten it up with better management."

One of his measures (House Bill 2678), being heard today by the House 
Health Committee, would authorize the state Department of Health to 
develop a secure growing facility on Maui for medical marijuana. A 
facilitator would make space available to patients or caregivers for 
a total of as many as 98 plants at one time.

A second bill, HB 2675, would allow a qualified patient to use 
marijuana for medical purposes with written certification from 
another state instead of a certificate from Hawaii's Department of 
Public Safety.

Keith Kamita, chief of the state Narcotics Enforcement Division, 
which administers the medical marijuana law, said a growing facility 
would violate federal law.

Also, because the bill mandates the DOH to control the facility, he 
said in an interview, "Now it's a state agency sanctioning marijuana. 
Say there's a bad batch and people die or get sick, the state would 
be liable for distributing a contaminated product."

Marijuana is still a Schedule 1 controlled substance, with no medical 
use allowed under federal law, and growers would have to obtain a 
research permit from the federal and state governments, he said.

Kamita also noted that more marijuana is showing up in schools, 
possibly because of its use for medical patients. "Kids can go see 
Grandpa and go see a harvest. We've just got to be very careful with this."

He said the problem with recognizing certification from another state 
for a person to use medical marijuana is that each state could have 
different qualifying conditions and rules.

Twelve other states have legalized marijuana, he said. "Our main 
concern is the differences between those states and Hawaii. There 
would be no way for law enforcement to verify the validity of that 
certificate (from another state)."

As of Wednesday, Kamita said, 4,047 Hawaii patients had received 
medical marijuana cards, and 368 caregivers and 124 physicians are 
participating in the program.

Joining Bertram at a news conference at the Capitol were Alan 
Doherty, a Big Island disabled veteran; Joseph Rattner, diagnosed 
with HIV 15 years ago; and Brian Murphy, executive director, Maui 
County Citizens for Democracy in Action and Patients Without Time.

Doherty, 84, said he comes to Honolulu at times for treatment at 
Tripler Army Medical Center and brought some marijuana with him on a 
recent trip because of pain in an injured foot.

It was seized at the airport, and six months later Hawaii County 
prosecutors charged him with transporting a detrimental drug, he 
said. He received a six-month suspended sentence and is on probation, he said.

He said the law restricts use of marijuana to a person's own house. 
"You can't take it or get it any place. I certainly hope that will be 
corrected so we can get our medical marijuana without all this hassle."

He said county prosecutors and the police "ignore marijuana as a 
medicine. They consider it to be a detrimental drug. That is a bad misnomer."

Rattner, president of West Hawaii Hope for a Cure Foundation, said 
growing marijuana "is a science in Hawaii," and a seriously ill 
person is not able to grow his own medicine. 
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