Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jul 1999
Source: Associated Press
Copyright: 1999 Associated Press
Author: Noah Isackson, Associated Press Writer

WHITE HOUSE TAKES ISSUE WITH MEDICAL MARIJUANA LEGISLATION

SACRAMENTO (AP) -- A California bill that would create a registration
system to regulate the use of marijuana as medicine would not pre-empt
federal laws prohibiting the drug, White House officials said Tuesday.

``This is not a commentary or critique on the bill,'' said Tom Umberg,
deputy director for the Office of National Drug Control Policy and a former
Democratic Assemblyman from Orange County. ``The bill is mostly a work in
progress and we're simply stating what federal policy is.''

The bill by Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-Santa Clara, proposes a registry to
protect legitimate medical marijuana users and growers from prosecution.

Patients with a doctor's recommendation that they use marijuana to control
pain, nausea or other conditions would be added to the registry and get an
identification card showing law enforcement that their marijuana possession
was legal.

Vasconcellos called the federal government's position ``a continued federal
assault on the wishes of California voters who enacted Proposition 215,''
the 1996 initiative that attempted to legalize marijuana use for medical
purposes.

``The Clinton Administration does not get it,'' Vasconcellos said in a
written statement. ``They are not the final word on medicinal marijuana in
our state.''

In addition to asserting that marijuana is illegal under federal law,
Umberg said that Vasconcellos bill ignores the findings of a federal study
that said that marijuana smoke is carcinogenic.

The report by the National Academy of Sciences concluded that further
research should go into methods whereby people could ingest the drug
without inhaling any smoke, Umberg said.

Vasconcellos agreed with the government study but said ``compassion
dictates we allow access (to marijuana) while research continues.''

News of the report came as no surprise to Atty. General Bill Lockyer, who
supports Proposition 215 and Vasconcellos' bill.

``I don't know if they've said anything particularly revolutionary,'' said
Nathan Barankin, a Lockyer spokesman. ``All we're trying to do is create a
system that respects the will of the voters and at the same time protects
the public's safety and health.''

Meanwhile, some medical marijuana advocates accused the Office of National
Drug Control Policy -- and its top official, Gen. Barry McCaffrey -- of
ignoring the people's will.

``General McCaffrey has presided over America's worst public policy failure
since the war in Vietnam,'' said Bill Zimmerman, executive director of
American's for Medical Rights. ``He has no right to tell Californians how
to create and enforce state laws.''
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