Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jun 2011 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 The Windsor Star Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/PTv2GKdw Website: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Ian Mulgrew, The Windsor Star COMPASSION CLUBS Medical marijuana clubs across the country have formed an association to lobby for a better regulatory system that would legalize their existence and improve patient access to the controversial drug. Called the Canadian Association of Medicinal Cannabis Dispensaries, the non-profit group's directors from B.C., Ontario and Quebec unveiled their strategy last month at an Ottawa media conference. The first of the dispensaries, also known as compassion clubs, was established in Vancouver about 15 years ago and now there are about 40 across Canada. But they are not part of the federal government's medical marijuana regulatory regime, which was established later, in 2001. "What we have now is a patchwork of self-imposed regulations (with each club dispensing marijuana according to its own rules)," said Dana Larsen, manager of the Vancouver Medical Cannabis Dispensary and a founding director of the new association. The goal, he explained, is to create a common set of regulations to ensure dispensaries operate uniformly and make it easier for patients to buy cannabis products at any outlet in Canada. At the moment, the operators risk criminal charges for drug trafficking, although police tolerate them given court decisions criticizing the inadequate legal delivery system and Ottawa's slow response to patient complaints. Patients say the medical marijuana program is a disaster and that without the clubs they would have to buy from street-corner dealers. An Ontario court recently struck down the anti-cannabis criminal law because the medical program is so flawed. In the eyes of the judge, it is unconstitutional for the government to enforce a criminal prohibition without providing appropriate access to the drug for patients who benefit from its therapeutic values. The federal government has appealed the ruling, saving the criminal law for now, and Health Canada insists it is considering changing the program. The dispensaries say they are serving more than 20,000 people with conditions including HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, cancer, arthritis, glaucoma and multiple sclerosis; Health Canada is putatively serving about half that. Part of the problem is that Health Canada provides only one strain of dried cannabis for patients to smoke; the clubs provide a variety of different strains along with edible cannabis products and tinctures, all of which provide different kinds of relief. If patients don't want to buy the government's pot, they can obtain a permit to legally grow their own or someone can obtain a permit to grow it for them. It's a crazy system -sick people being told to go home and grow their medication, which means they'll have a dose in three or four months. The clubs have filled a vacuum and now want their existence recognized and regularized. It's about time. There are 10 in Metro Vancouver, another 10 across British Columbia and 20 more scattered across the country, mostly in and around the Toronto-Montreal areas. "At the end of the day, this is about providing patients with a medication they desperately need," Larsen said. "After 10 years, everyone is tired of waiting for the federal government to abide by the courts and regulate medical marijuana dispensaries." By Ian Mulgrew, The Windsor Star Medical marijuana clubs across the country have formed an association to lobby for a better regulatory system that would legalize their existence and improve patient access to the controversial drug. Called the Canadian Association of Medicinal Cannabis Dispensaries, the non-profit group's directors from B.C., Ontario and Quebec unveiled their strategy last month at an Ottawa media conference. The first of the dispensaries, also known as compassion clubs, was established in Vancouver about 15 years ago and now there are about 40 across Canada. But they are not part of the federal government's medical marijuana regulatory regime, which was established later, in 2001. "What we have now is a patchwork of self-imposed regulations (with each club dispensing marijuana according to its own rules)," said Dana Larsen, manager of the Vancouver Medical Cannabis Dispensary and a founding director of the new association. The goal, he explained, is to create a common set of regulations to ensure dispensaries operate uniformly and make it easier for patients to buy cannabis products at any outlet in Canada. At the moment, the operators risk criminal charges for drug trafficking, although police tolerate them given court decisions criticizing the inadequate legal delivery system and Ottawa's slow response to patient complaints. Patients say the medical marijuana program is a disaster and that without the clubs they would have to buy from street-corner dealers. An Ontario court recently struck down the anti-cannabis criminal law because the medical program is so flawed. In the eyes of the judge, it is unconstitutional for the government to enforce a criminal prohibition without providing appropriate access to the drug for patients who benefit from its therapeutic values. The federal government has appealed the ruling, saving the criminal law for now, and Health Canada insists it is considering changing the program. The dispensaries say they are serving more than 20,000 people with conditions including HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, cancer, arthritis, glaucoma and multiple sclerosis; Health Canada is putatively serving about half that. Part of the problem is that Health Canada provides only one strain of dried cannabis for patients to smoke; the clubs provide a variety of different strains along with edible cannabis products and tinctures, all of which provide different kinds of relief. If patients don't want to buy the government's pot, they can obtain a permit to legally grow their own or someone can obtain a permit to grow it for them. It's a crazy system -sick people being told to go home and grow their medication, which means they'll have a dose in three or four months. The clubs have filled a vacuum and now want their existence recognized and regularized. It's about time. There are 10 in Metro Vancouver, another 10 across British Columbia and 20 more scattered across the country, mostly in and around the Toronto-Montreal areas. "At the end of the day, this is about providing patients with a medication they desperately need," Larsen said. "After 10 years, everyone is tired of waiting for the federal government to abide by the courts and regulate medical marijuana dispensaries." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.