Pubdate: Tue, 21 Jan 2014
Source: Flagpole (GA)
Copyright: 2014 Flagpole Inc.
Contact:  http://www.flagpole.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2407
Author: David Schick

GEORGIA MIGHT LEGALIZE MEDICAL MARIJUANA

A few lawmakers under the Gold Dome have started buzzing about
bringing medical marijuana to Georgia.

State Sen. Josh McKoon (R-Columbus) picked up an idea sparked by CNN
medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta's documentary about marijuana's
applications for patients who find no relief from available
pharmaceuticals.

"Children with certain seizure disorders who really have been unable
to find any relief with any of the traditional medical remedies
available to them... [are] receiving a lot of relief from this oil
that can be derived from marijuana," McKoon told the website
ZPolitics. Because some Georgia residents can't get the medicine they
need, they're moving to Colorado, he added.

The idea might actually get a serious look. In a recent report by
Channel 2 Action News, Georgia House Speaker David Ralston (R-Blue
Ridge) said that he would be open to the idea of medical marijuana.
"Let's take the politics out of it and sort of look at the science and
hear from the medical professionals," Ralston said.

McKoon said there's "an appetite for dialog" among some state
legislators who have contacted him with interest in being a part of
any proceedings on the issue. He said he wants to "get medical expert
testimony in front of the legislature to determine if there needs be a
change."

James Bell, executive director for Georgia Campaign for Access, Reform
and Education, has been advocating for cannabis reform for years. Last
spring, Georgia CARE helped organize the Southern Cannabis Reform
Conference to educate about marijuana prohibition and the drug's benefits.

"Cannabis is an old-world remedy we're rediscovering in the 21st
Century," Bell told Flagpole.

Believe it or not, Georgia was actually one of the first states to
enact a bill in the early 1980s under the federal government's
Controlled Substances Therapeutic Research Act. It was meant to give
cancer and glaucoma patients access to marijuana in a research setting
to gain a greater understanding of its medicinal effects. The law
relied on the federal government's cooperation and supply of the
substance-typically a very low-grade version of the type of marijuana
that can be grown today, "what a smoker today would call ditch weed,"
Bell said.

The THC content-tetrahydrocannabinol, the chemical compound that gets
you high-is much higher today and comes in a safer way to ingest it,
such as "dabs of oil, lozenges, vaporizing products" and other edibles
that are less harmful to the lungs than the traditional smoke
inhalation route, Bell said. What's more, another chemical compound in
marijuana-CBD, or cannabidiol-doesn't make you high, but may possess
broader medicinal uses than THC.

Georgia's program for obtaining medical marijuana ended before it even
got started because the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration stopped supplying it in 1982, and the
program has lain dormant since.

"We've lost 30 years of potential research... Georgia could've been
the pioneer in therapeutic research [for cannabis]," Bell. "We're way
beyond research at this point" he said, pointing to the 20 other
states that have legalized or decriminalized medical marijuana.

Bell is calling for a "comprehensive law" that will allow patients to
gain access to the natural medicine they need.

One of Athens' legislators, Sen. Frank Ginn (R-Danielsville), has
spoken to McKoon about medicinal marijuana. He said the idea is in the
"preliminary stages" right now, but he's interested in finding out if
there are "legitimate purposes" for the drug.

"As far as the expediency in which we need to move, I can't say this
is anything that we need to expedite," Ginn said. "I don't think
there's any reason to delay it."

The research has already been done, Bell said, and if state
legislators would "have an open mind and listen," legalizing medical
marijuana could be accomplished in a shorter period of time. There are
experts around the world, like Gupta-who has an office in Atlanta-who
would probably step in to testify, he said.

Two Atlanta patients-one who suffers from glaucoma and another who
suffers from cancer-have applied for benefits under Georgia's existing
medical marijuana statute to solicit a response from legislators and
to add pressure on the legislature to do something during this
session, Bell said.

"It's not matter of if; it's a matter when it will happen," Bell
said. 
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