Pubdate: Mon, 9 Nov 2009
Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL)
Copyright: 2009 The Gainesville Sun
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/yMmn4Ifw
Website: http://www.gainesville.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163
Author: Allison Arteaga, Correspondent
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - United States)

WILL FLORIDA BE NEXT TO ALLOW MEDICAL MARIJUANA?

A new federal policy toward medical marijuana has sparked discussion 
among Florida residents about the future of Florida's marijuana laws.

Under federal law, the use or sale of marijuana has long been 
illegal. But since 1996, advocacy groups have succeeded in passing 
laws in 13 states that made the use of marijuana for medical purposes 
legal within those states.

Because federal law supersedes state law, patients who used medical 
marijuana in compliance with the laws of their states were often 
still at risk for federal prosecution.

But recently, the U.S. Justice Department announced that it would be 
shifting its marijuana prosecution efforts, and, in a memo from 
Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden, said that federal prosecutors 
"should not focus federal resources in your States on individuals 
whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing 
state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana."

This announcement signaled that the federal government will 
essentially be allowing individual states to decide the legality of 
medical marijuana for themselves.

For legalization activists in states where medical marijuana is not 
legal, such as Florida, the new policy provides a powerful incentive 
to continue in efforts toward legalization.

"I feel emboldened," said Jodi James, a member of the board of 
directors for the Florida Cannabis Action Network. "One of the 
obstacles that we have always heard, working at a state level, is 
that whatever we do here in Florida, we were just going to be in 
conflict with the federal government. So it's exciting to think about 
the idea that this helps us to overcome that obstacle."

James believes that medical marijuana is essential for "healing the 
community," and she points to the effects of legalization in 
California as an example of the positive impact that legal medical 
marijuana could have in Florida.

"We have seen more people moving away from alcoholism, we have seen 
(marijuana) dispensaries that become one of the single largest 
taxpayers in a community, and we have seen the use of marijuana by 
children decline," she said. "So we have less spending on 
marijuana-related arrests, we have fewer people incarcerated for 
possession of cannabis, and you have patients that might have been 
using a medicine that is more toxic now using less toxic medicines."

However, there are others, like Lt. Tim Hayes of the 
Gainesville-Alachua County Drug Task Force, who think that 
California's experience with medical marijuana has revealed very 
negative effects for communities.

"I think that if we go the way California did, then it's just an 
absolute disaster for the state," he said.

Hayes believes that Californians have taken advantage of the state's 
loose regulations on medical marijuana and have simply been using the 
law as a convenient cover for illegal recreational use of the drug.

Hayes likened this phenomenon to "the debacle of prescription drugs" 
that Florida's law enforcement is currently struggling with.

"We're dealing with people illegally selling prescription drugs 
almost to a level more than cocaine," he said. "Because of Florida's 
lax laws on prescription drugs, we have people from all the 
surrounding states coming here and they travel around the state 
getting the prescription painkillers mainly to go back and sell them. 
I kind of look at medical marijuana in Florida like that."

Paul Doering, a distinguished service professor of pharmacy at the 
University of Florida, agreed that recreational abuse of pain killers 
has been a big problem, and he said it's likely that medical 
marijuana would be similarly abused if doctors continue to provide 
inappropriate prescriptions.

"There are enough crooked doctors out there to move a whole lot of 
morphine and oxycodone," he said. "And in contrast, if those guys are 
as crooked as the day is long, there might be others who might simply 
be sympathetic and might, in their own college days, have enjoyed a 
toke here or there, who simply think our marijuana laws are wrong and 
will write (a prescription) at the drop of a hat."

In addition to acknowledging the law enforcement problems that 
medical marijuana might create, Doering explained that the suspected 
therapeutic effects of marijuana might not be as great as some would hope.

Marijuana has been suggested for the treatment of ailments such as 
glaucoma, multiple sclerosis and nausea from chemotherapy, but 
Doering said that the effectiveness of the drug has been exaggerated 
by supporters of medical marijuana.

The scientific literature is just not real clear on what marijuana is 
good for or can be used for," said Doering. "If you were to look at 
the scientific evidence with the same scrutiny that you look at 
pharmaceutical drugs, marijuana is not that great."

Doering said he does think medical marijuana could be useful in some 
circumstances, but he also said that he believes the push for 
legalization of medical marijuana is largely a front for the 
legalization of marijuana for all uses.

James of the Florida Cannabis Action Network said the legalization of 
all marijuana is, in fact, the main goal of her organization.

"All indicators are that bringing it into the light of day would be a 
positive experience," she said. "We can go back to the prohibition of 
alcohol to see the damage that prohibition causes. It breeds 
criminals who are willing to stop at nothing to protect profits."

However, the main debate in marijuana policy continues to be limited 
to the issue of medical marijuana within the state.

The Florida Legislature holds the ultimate deciding power in this 
debate, and according to Charles E. Van Zant, who is vice chairman of 
the Health Care Regulation Policy Committee in Florida's House of 
Representatives, the laws are unlikely to change in the near future.

'I do not believe that any bill would pass the House or the Senate 
that would allow (medical marijuana) to become legal in Florida," he 
said. "It's not in the forefront of issues that we're considering in 
Tallahassee." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake