Pubdate: Thu, 12 May 2011
Source: News Journal, The (Wilmington, DE)
Page: Front Page
Copyright: 2011 The News Journal
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/1c6Xgdq3
Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822
Author: Chad Livengood, The News Journal
Referenced: SB 17 
http://legis.delaware.gov/LIS/LIS146.nsf/vwLegislation/SB+17?Opendocument
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.)
Bookmark: http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-de (Delaware)

DELAWARE SENATE APPROVES MEDICAL MARIJUANA

Supporters Tout Strict Rules

DOVER -- Delawareans with cancer, HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis and 
other debilitating diseases could be legally using marijuana a year 
from now to alleviate the effects of their ailments.

The Senate on Wednesday sent Gov. Jack Markell legislation that would 
decriminalize marijuana possession, use and distribution for limited 
medical purposes.

The Senate's final vote came after an extensive lobbying effort that 
began in January with a visit to Legislative Hall by celebrity talk 
show host Montel Williams, who uses marijuana to ease the 
debilitating effects of MS.

With Markell expected to sign the bill soon, Delaware would have one 
of the strictest medical marijuana laws in the country, regulating 
everything from the quality of the cannabis to how it is transported. 
Fifteen states, including New Jersey, already have medical marijuana 
laws on the books.

"There is no other bill like the bill we just passed here in 
Delaware," said Senate Majority Whip Margaret Rose Henry, a 
Wilmington Democrat who was the bill's sponsor.

Unlike residents in other states, ill Delawareans who get a doctor's 
recommendation to use marijuana would not be allowed to grow their 
own at home. They would be supplied only through state-licensed dispensaries.

"All of the changes that were written in weren't bad things, they 
were responsible and safety things," said Joe Scarborough, a 
47-year-old Wilmington man with HIV who advocated the bill.

Laws in New Jersey and the District of Columbia also prohibit home 
cultivation, according to the Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, 
D.C., advocacy group that helped write the Delaware legislation.

Three Dispensaries

Under the bill, the Department of Health and Social Services would 
issue one dispensary license in each county to a not-for-profit 
organization. Licenses could be added in the future if demand warrants.

Usage of dispensaries, or so-called "compassion centers," varies by 
state. Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont and Washington do not 
allow them, limiting marijuana growing to patients' homes, according 
to the Marijuana Policy Project

The District of Columbia plans five to eight dispensaries, New Jersey 
has authorized six, Rhode Island has three and Colorado has nearly 
1,000 dispensaries.

California doesn't license dispensaries, which has led to thousands 
of them opening up across the state. Arizona has 125 because of a 
legal limit of one dispensary for every 10 pharmacies in the state.

Health officials do not know how many of Delaware's 900,000 residents 
might register through the program.

About 64,000 of the 9.9 million residents of Michigan have gotten 
physician approval for marijuana use in the first two years of the 
program, the Detroit Free Press recently reported.

Critics of Michigan's law point to the fact that just 55 doctors have 
certified 71 percent of all medical marijuana users as evidence of 
the need for stricter regulation.

Henry contends her bill will prevent the type of mass prescribing of 
marijuana seen in Michigan.

The bill requires a "bona fide physician-patient relationship" for a 
doctor to recommend marijuana for a qualifying patient. And a patient 
must have exhausted other medical remedies before a physician can 
recommend smoking, ingesting or inhaling marijuana, said Rep. Helene 
Keeley, D-Wilmington West, who co-sponsored the bill.

Debilitating medical conditions that would qualify for marijuana 
usage include cancer, HIV/AIDS, MS, ALS, Alzheimer's disease and 
post-traumatic stress disorder. People with other debilitating 
conditions could qualify if other medicines or surgical procedures 
have failed to relieve pain, seizures, muscle spasms or intractable nausea.

New Jersey, which legalized medical marijuana last year, and at least 
12 other states allow glaucoma patients to obtain cannabis to treat 
their condition. Delaware's law would not.

In a deal made with Delaware physicians, the Senate removed glaucoma, 
Crohn's disease and early stages of hepatitis C from the list of 
conditions that would qualify. Physicians were not convinced there is 
valid evidence that marijuana has therapeutic effects in treating 
those diseases, said Mark Meister Sr., executive director of the 
Delaware Medical Society.

The state would issue medical marijuana identification cards to 
patients 18 years and older or to assigned caregivers, who would have 
to be at least 21 years old and have no record of felony offenses. 
Age restrictions are rare in other states' laws. "In most other 
states, there either is not an age limit or special rules for those 
under 18," said Noah Mamber, legislative analyst for the Marijuana 
Policy Project.

The bill contains a host of provisions aimed at preventing medical 
marijuana from becoming mixed in with illegally purchased pot.

Qualified patients and caregivers could face prosecution for failure 
to transport marijuana in tamperproof containers issued by the 
dispensary. While in possession of marijuana, patients will be 
required to carry their cards "and may be subject to prosecution for 
failure to do so," according to the bill.

For the most part, marijuana usage by qualified patients would be 
limited to personal residences. The bill prohibits possessing 
marijuana on a school bus, on school grounds and at any correctional 
facility. Smoking medical marijuana would be prohibited on any form 
of public transportation and in any public place.

Six Ounces a Month

Under the bill, qualified patients could buy up to six ounces of 
marijuana each month -- more than double the monthly possession limit 
in most states.

California has an eight-ounce limit and Oregon and Washington, where 
home growing is permitted, each allow residents to possess up to 24 
ounces of marijuana, according to the Marijuana Policy Project.

Sen. Colin Bonini, R-Dover South, voted against the bill, contending 
the Legislature has just put the state on the path toward full 
legalization of marijuana.

"We're going to have a lot of marijuana in Delaware," said Bonini, 
who called the bill the "most lenient marijuana law east of the Mississippi."

The bill also would establish a state-supervised safety compliance 
facility to test marijuana grown at dispensaries. DHSS estimated that 
implementing the legislation and regulating the dispensaries would 
cost $480,100 in the 2013 fiscal year and $358,680 in the 2014 fiscal 
year. Those costs will be recovered through licensing and application 
fees for the dispensaries, Henry said.

"Once the project is up and running, it will actually pay for 
itself," Henry said.

Henry and Keeley stopped attempts to add a $2-per-ounce fee on the 
sale of marijuana. Other states levy taxes on the drug as a way to 
generate revenue.

"We are not looking at this as a moneymaking venture," Henry said. 
"But we do expect it to break even."

DHSS said it needs $72,700 in state funding for the 2012 fiscal year 
to start implementing the program over the next year.

During brief discussion before the final passage of the bill on 
Wednesday, Bonini contested the estimated costs of the program.

"It's bad enough we're doing something that's very bad public 
policy," Bonini said. "But we're making taxpayers pay for it."

[sidebar]

DELAWARE'S LAW AT A GLANCE

Delaware's medical marijuana law will protect qualified patients, 
caregivers and growers from criminal prosecution for distributing the 
drug for medicinal purposes. Highlights of Senate Bill 17:

. Marijuana usage limited to residents 18 and older with cancer, 
Alzheimer's, HIV/AIDS, MS, ALS and PTSD.

. Physician recommendation required to obtain card for purchase.

. Possession limit of 6 ounces a month.

. No growing pot at home.

. Marijuana growing and sales initially limited to three nonprofit 
dispensaries (one in each county).  
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake