Pubdate: Sun, 26 Apr 2015 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2015 The Tribune Co. Contact: http://tbo.com/list/news-opinion-letters/submit/ Website: http://tbo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: John G. Chase Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n220/a09.html NOTHING TO BE AFRAID OF Regarding "State's medical pot law takes hit" (Other Views. April 21): Cerise Naylor tactfully understates the selfishness of those who have kept sick children horn getting life-saving marijuana. I would not have been so tactful. The problems began when legislators, who had all come of age in marijuana prohibition, wrote Senate SB1030 as a restrictive bill focused on business, control and fear of voter reaction a=C2=80" not on compassion. If they had consulted a few of the first 12 states, with a combined 146 years of experience, they'd have known that Florida has nothing to fear from medical marijuana. Peer-reviewed studies of those 12 by medical experts, criminologists and economists confirm public safety actually improves. (Personal cultivation is arguably the reason for the rapid collapse of their street markets.) Now, to their credit, legislators are writing SB 7066 to modify SB 1030. But SB 7066 should be more like Amendment 2, supported by 58 percent of Florida voters in November. It needs three things common to all of the first states: a mechanism for adding eligible ailments/conditions; personal cultivation; and smoking allowed. Next year legislators can add things like reciprocity with other states, child custody protections, housing protections and privacy standards. Maine's 1995 law should be their guide. John G. Chase Palm Harbor - --- MAP posted-by: Matt