Pubdate: Sat, 11 Apr 2009
Source: Great Falls Tribune (MT)
Copyright: 2009 Great Falls Tribune
Contact: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/customerservice/contactus.html
Website: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2502
Author: John S. Adams
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILLS STALL BUT NEW DIALOGUE OPENS

HELENA--Despite efforts by members of both parties to  reform the 
state's Medical Marijuana Act, the law  passed by voters in 2004 will 
remain unchanged.

Four bills this session aimed to either liberalize or  add 
restrictions to the law that allows registered  patients to legally 
use marijuana to treat the symptoms  of chronic pain and certain 
illnesses. A fifth bill  would have reduced the penalty for simple 
marijuana  possession from a misdemeanor to a civil infraction.

All of the bills stalled in committee.

Tom Daubert of Patients and Families United--the group  spearheading 
the pro-medical marijuana bills--said even  though the group 
experienced some legislative setbacks,  the medical marijuana 
movement made gains this session.

"I think that our effectiveness and persistence at the  session will 
open doors with the law enforcement  community that we have tried in 
the past to open  without success," Daubert said.

Under the existing law, a registered patient may grow  and possess up 
to six marijuana plants and one usable  ounce of marijuana.

Senate Bill 326, sponsored by Sen. Ron Erikson of  Missoula, was the 
most ambitious of the pro-medical  marijuana efforts. The bill would 
have increased the  amount of marijuana that patients could possess 
from  one ounce to three ounces, and would have added to the  list of 
chronic or debilitating medical ailments the  drug could be used to treat.

Supporters of the measure said the bill was necessary  to give 
patients access to a reasonable amount of the  drug they need.

To the surprise of many observers, the measure cleared  a 
Republican-controlled Senate but then died in the  evenly divided 
House Judiciary Committee on a  party-line vote with opponents saying 
they were  concerned that licensed growers would sell the drug to 
recreational users.

"I would say we are deeply disappointed to have come so  close to 
improving the law so that it can truly work  for patients as voters 
had intended, but we're really  proud of how much statewide 
involvement we generated  for patients and their supporters all 
over," Daubert  said. "I think all legislators know a whole lot 
more  than they did before."

Craig Campbell of the Montana Narcotics Officers  Association opposed 
changes to the existing law.  Campbell said that while law 
enforcement community has  accepted the fact that voters in Montana 
have approved the use of medical marijuana for certain patients, 
they  are wary of expanding the law without more "unbiased  empirical 
data" on its medical uses.

"Since the Montana voters said it should be allowed to  be used with 
a medicinal card, then we will certainly  allow that. We just didn't 
want the amount to be upped  and have people try to subvert the law 
even more,"  Campbell said.

Campbell said that most marijuana patients are probably  staying 
within the limits of the law approved by  voters, but others are 
abusing it. He said documented  cases of registered patients or 
caregivers growing more  marijuana than the law allows have put many 
law  enforcement officials on edge.

"To me, that seems like there's some arrogance involved  in growing 
more than what they were supposed to, or  using the medicinal 
caregiver or patient designation as  a guise in order to grow 
marijuana," Campbell said. '"I  don't want to say that everyone does that."

Daubert and Campbell agree that this session was  unprecedented in 
the way it brought patients and law  enforcement together discuss the 
merits of medical  marijuana.

"I got to meet a lot of nice people that I think are  probably doing 
it right," Campbell said. "There was  some education. I think 
whenever two parties come  together and have open dialogue, I just 
think that there's going to be more empathy and there's going to  be 
a lot more learning on the side as opposed to just  going into it blindly."

Campbell said he's willing to continue to talk with  Patients and 
Families United during the interim.

Daubert said most patients are gratified that they came  so close to 
improving the law, but he said others are  "disgusted" by the 
"continuing ignorance" of those  opposed to medical marijuana.

"I would say there's a rising sentiments among patients  that it's 
probably as important to change all marijuana  policy as it is to 
perfect the medical marijuana  policy," Daubert said. "One of the 
biggest obstacles  patients face is social prohibition -- not just 
ignorance about the medicinal realities."

Daubert said medical marijuana advocates are already  putting what 
they learned this session to use as they  prepare for 2011.

"I think it's fair to predict that we'll be back in the  next 
session, proposing some of the same stuff as well  as some new 
ideas," Daubert said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom