Pubdate: March 3, 1999 Source: San Francisco Bay Guardian (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Bay Guardian Contact: http://www.sfbg.com Author: Randall Lyman POT SHOTS PERON STAGES SIT-IN AT MIGDEN'S OFFICE Medical marijuana activist Dennis Peron and a handful of supporters staged a 45-minute sit-in at the San Francisco office of state assembly member Carole Migden Friday, Feb. 26 to protest Migden's refusal to sponsor a bill that would legally reclassify, or "reschedule," marijuana in California. The bill, which Peron had asked Migden to introduce in the state legislature, would reschedule marijuana automatically once it is rescheduled by the federal government. Marijuana is currently a Schedule 1 drug, meaning it is legally considered to have no medicinal value and to have a high potential for abuse. "I thought she should be the one to sponsor it," Peron said. "I've been trying to convince her, but she refuses. People have to suffer more because she's stalling." Migden and her chief of staff in Sacramento, Alan Lofaso, told the Bay Guardian they fully supported rescheduling marijuana but believed that introducing a bill now would be ineffectual. "Of course we could do it now, but it wouldn't help, because federal law is the hurdle," Lofaso said. "Introducing a bill doesn't send a message to the federal government. The state of California taking action sends a message. That was what Proposition 215 did." "We don't need convincing," Migden said of Peron's bill. "If the federal government reschedules [during the current session], I'll sponsor a bill. I commit 100 percent to using one of my bills or someone else's bill to reschedule marijuana." Peron remained unconvinced. "She says, 'if and when.' That's exactly what we're trying to avoid. Just because the federal government reschedules doesn't mean California will have to." On the contrary, he said, federal rescheduling would only increase law-enforcement resistance to changing state law. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea