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161 US GA: Edu: Legalizing Medical Marijuana Could Excel State's HealthThu, 20 Mar 2014
Source:Red and Black, The (U of Georgia, GA Edu) Author:Baruchman, Machelle Area:Georgia Lines:104 Added:03/22/2014

If the Georgia Senate and House of Representatives approve the medical marijuana bill the state would become a leader in the nation in health care.

James Bell, founder of Georgia Campaign for Access, Reform and Education is one supporter of this belief.

House Bill 885 would grant easier access for patients with glaucoma, epilepsy and cancer to receive cannabidiol oil, a derivative of medical marijuana.

On March 3, "Crossover Day," the last possible day for a bill to be approved by either chamber, the Georgia House of Representatives passed House Bill 885 in a 171 person to four person vote, Bell said. The bill then went to a senate committee who debated and altered the bill, attaching autism to the list of patients allowed to receive medical cannabis. The senate will vote to approve the amended version and pass it along to the House for a vote on March 20.

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162 US GA: Edu: Editorial: Medical Amnesty Promotes Safety Over LegalityThu, 20 Mar 2014
Source:Red and Black, The (U of Georgia, GA Edu) Author:Brown, Cy Area:Georgia Lines:58 Added:03/22/2014

When students drink and do drugs they normally have two fears: the fear of getting in trouble and the fear of someone getting hurt. And the former almost always trumps the latter with college students. The choice between the two has left too many dead in the past.

But Georgia House Bill 965 - or the Georgia 911 Medical Amnesty Law - would grant amnesty from small drug charges to those who call for help in the case of drug overdoses. It overwhelmingly passed through the House and Senate and now awaits Gov. Nathan Deal.

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163 US GA: PUB LTE: Supporting SufferingThu, 20 Mar 2014
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA) Author:White, Stan Area:Georgia Lines:26 Added:03/22/2014

Citizens rightly have contempt for cannabis (marijuana) prohibition, one of America's worst policy failures in history. Anyone who wants to use cannabis does. The concept of keeping sick citizens from using the plant in order to stop responsible adults from using cannabis, which is already easy to acquire, is mind-boggling. Politicians who support the continued suffering of sick citizens over this beneficial God-given plant should be replaced immediately before another citizen suffers due to their ignorance.

- -- Stan White

Dillon, Colo.

[end]

164 US GA: Pot Possession A Hot Topic At Athens-Clarke MayoralThu, 20 Mar 2014
Source:Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Author:Thompson, Jim Area:Georgia Lines:94 Added:03/21/2014

Sharp distinctions were drawn Wednesday night between the two candidates in the nonpartisan race for mayor of Athens-Clarke County, but a debate sponsored by the Young Democrats of UGA also revealed a point of near-agreement between incumbent Nancy Denson and her challenger - no relation - local activist Tim Denson.

The mayor used Wednesday's debate on the UGA campus, in front of dozens of students, a handful of Athens residents and a couple of commission candidates, to announce for the first time that she favors the decriminalization of possession and use of small amounts of marijuana.

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165 US GA: PUB LTE: Lawmaker Pushes Agenda, Risks Sick KidsTue, 18 Mar 2014
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Author:Cloud, Blaine Area:Georgia Lines:30 Added:03/20/2014

An open letter to state Rep. Sharon Cooper: As a parent pushing for life-saving medical cannabis here in Georgia for my daughter who suffers from severe seizures and developmental delays, I had hoped as an elected official, you would not resort to outright lies to push your agenda ("Research needed, complexity abounds," Opinion, Feb. 14), especially at the expense of sick children. Your op-ed painted a picture that we are seeking unresearched, untested, dangerous medicine for our children, and nothing could be further from the truth. The medicine we seek is already doctor-approved, lab-tested and safer than then numerous FDA-approved drugs our children take today. I also can't understand why you would do this about a bill (House Bill 885) that you have voted in favor of twice now. Please correct your facts the next time you speak publicly and try to use scare tactics to prevent our children from getting life-saving medicine.

BLAINE CLOUD, SMYRNA

[end]

166 US GA: Georgia Senate Panel OKs Bill To Ease Access To Medical MarijuanaFri, 14 Mar 2014
Source:Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Author:Craig, Charles Area:Georgia Lines:114 Added:03/17/2014

ATLANTA - A Georgia Senate panel this week unanimously approved a newly-revised bill that would legalize marijuana derivatives in Georgia for treatment of patients with cancer, glaucoma and seizure disorders.

The Senate Health and Human Services Committee amended House Bill 885, the original House version of the medical marijuana bill, to make it easier for Georgians to gain access to cannabidiol oil, a non-psychoactive derivative of marijuana.

The major change would grant immunity from prosecution in Georgia for possession of CBD oil obtained legally in a state that permits the use of medical marijuana.

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167 US GA: Senate Panel Approves Latest Version Of Medical CannabisThu, 13 Mar 2014
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA) Author:Lee, Maggie Area:Georgia Lines:102 Added:03/17/2014

ATLANTA -- A state Senate panel unanimously approved possession in Georgia of a single type of medicine derived from cannabis, with the state's prosecutors signed onto a plan that violates federal law.

The measure offers "protection from prosecution for possession of cannabidiol oil" used for seizure treatment, said state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, who made the edit on his own House Bill 885 in front of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee on Wednesday afternoon.

The oil is made from a strain of marijuana that is low in tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the chemical that delivers the plant's high. The plant is rich in cannabidiol, which is non-hallucinogenic and which relieves severe seizures in some afflicted children.

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168 US GA: Edu: Column: The Lesser Of Three EvilsThu, 13 Mar 2014
Source:Spectator, The (GA Edu) Author:Wilkerson, LaMarcus Area:Georgia Lines:64 Added:03/15/2014

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 443,000 people die from tobacco each year; 8.6 million live with a life-threatening illness, and approximately 46.6 million Americans continue to use the drug.

Like tobacco, alcohol is abused by numerous Americans. Over 80,000 deaths are caused by excessive drinking yearly in the U.S.

However, both tobacco and alcohol are legal and sold at a store nearby. Two of the top three killers in America are sold at grocery stores and gas stations.

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169 US GA: Edu: Column: Anti-Overdose Drug Sparks ControversyThu, 13 Mar 2014
Source:Spectator, The (GA Edu) Author:Oglesby, LaShawn Area:Georgia Lines:44 Added:03/15/2014

A drug that counteracts overdoses on opioid drugs such as heroine, OxyContin and morphine is now available to the public for free.

The drug is called Naloxone, and it isn't a new drug; patients in ambulances and emergency rooms get this antidotal drug when it is required.

Though this drug sounds amazing, many have voiced concerns that it doesn't help drug users get clean and instead makes them take higher doses of drugs because they don't have to worry about fatal overdoses.

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170US GA: OPED: Research Needed, Complexity AboundsFri, 14 Mar 2014
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Author:Cooper, Sharon Area:Georgia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/15/2014

"The road to hell is paved with good intentions." That old adage certainly fits a scenario playing out in the Georgia General Assembly.

House Bill 885 or "Haleigh's Hope Act" - better known around the Gold Dome as the medical marijuana bill - began as a tightly drawn bill to provide children with intractable seizures access to an oil derived from a specific marijuana strain available only in Colorado.

This little-known product is "manufactured" by a group of marijuana-growing siblings - not physicians or scientists. It gained national notoriety thanks to the CNN special "Weed" and anecdotal reports by families of their children's seemingly miraculous cures. As we studied this bill, we found that this oil hasn't been tested for purity or consistency, and it hasn't been tested in animals.

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171US GA: OPED: Let's Think Of The SufferingFri, 14 Mar 2014
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Author:Hogan, Eli Area:Georgia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/15/2014

I am 17 years old, and I suffer from severe Crohn's Disease, a chronic inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract.

I have struggled with this disease for two years now, and spent my Christmas vacation at Scottish Rite in Atlanta full of IVs, being fed through a catheter run under my bicep into my chest cavity, in agonizing pain, losing blood, and on the verge of needing a total removal of my colon. I dropped from 170 pounds to 135, all on a 6-foot 2-inch frame.

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172US GA: Column: Prudent, Limited Step on Cannabis Oil OffersThu, 13 Mar 2014
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Author:Wingfield, Kyle Area:Georgia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/14/2014

Legislators may pass the Haleigh's Hope Act before the session ends next week, improving access to a form of medical marijuana for children like her who suffer from seizure disorders. But Haleigh won't be in Georgia for the occasion.

"Haleigh quit breathing six times last night, so we don't have time anymore," her mother, Janea Cox, told me Wednesday. Mother and daughter left Thursday for Colorado, which already has legalized the cannabis oil that has helped other children reduce the number of debilitating seizures they suffer from as many as hundreds every day to as few as one every few months.

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173 US GA: New Peake Tack Is Licensed Dispensaries For Medical CannabisThu, 06 Mar 2014
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA) Author:Lee, Maggie Area:Georgia Lines:58 Added:03/10/2014

ATLANTA -- The federal barriers between Georgians and an epilepsy medicine made from cannabis are so insurmountable that the Macon representative who is championing the cause plans to propose licensing nonprofit dispensaries in Georgia.

"I'm going to provide that as an option to include in our next draft of the bill," said state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, if a Senate committee hears his House Bill 885 by a key legislative deadline Wednesday.

Peake won nearly universal House support for his original bill, which said that Georgia's medical research universities could grow a type of cannabis that's high in cannabidiol, or CBD, and make liquid epilepsy medicine from it. Such CBD-rich liquids are nonhallucinogenic and are already used in Britain and Colorado to treat children who have intractable, severe epilepsy disorders.

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174US GA: House Oks Medical Marijuana BillTue, 04 Mar 2014
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Author:Sheinin, Aaron Gould Area:Georgia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/07/2014

Georgia Children With Severe Seizure Disorder Are Closer to Treatment.

The Georgia House on Monday gave overwhelming approval to a bill that would legalize a type of medical marijuana to treat certain seizure disorders.

Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, the sponsor of House Bill 885, said it's an important step toward saving the lives of children who can suffer 100 or more seizures a day. The particular strain of marijuana, known as Charlotte's Web, has shown it can ease or eliminate symptoms of patients taking the cannabis oil derived from the plant.

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175US GA: Georgia Lawmakers Debate Legalizing Medical MarijuanaTue, 04 Mar 2014
Source:Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN) Author:Henry, Ray Area:Georgia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/05/2014

ATLANTA (AP) - Patients diagnosed with certain illnesses could take a form of medical marijuana under a plan that Georgia's state legislators backed Monday ahead of an important deadline that sorts out which bills go forward and which will likely fail for the year.

Legislative rules force Georgia's state lawmakers to get their bills approved by at least one chamber of the General Assembly by what's commonly called "Crossover Day," or else those bills are unlikely to get to the governor's desk. That rule can be bent, but it is difficult.

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176 US GA: OPED: Georgia's Dirty Secret: Asset ForfeitureSun, 02 Mar 2014
Source:Savannah Morning News (GA) Author:Dodd, Benita M. Area:Georgia Lines:97 Added:03/05/2014

There's no doubt that Georgia's law enforcement officials dislike strings that restrict civil asset forfeiture, which is the power of law enforcement to seize and keep property suspected of being involved in criminal activity. They've told state legislators that, time and again.

For the rest of Georgia, however, it's a problem.

Unlike with criminal asset forfeiture, under civil forfeiture the owner of the property being seized does not have to be charged with a crime. Cash, cars, homes and other property can be taken without even filing charges, let alone convicting the property's owner of a crime.

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177 US GA: Holly Springs Mom, State Rep. Hopeful For Success Of MedicalFri, 28 Feb 2014
Source:Marietta Daily Journal (GA) Author:Sharpe, Joshua Area:Georgia Lines:82 Added:03/05/2014

Never in her life did Corey Lowe think her native Georgia would even consider allowing medical marijuana, but now she's hopeful that lawmakers have heard her pleas for a chance to help her improve her child's life with the drug.

The Holly Springs resident said she was ecstatic Wednesday after a bill allowing non-psychoactive cannabis oil to treat seizure patients got unanimous approval in a state House committee and moved one step closer to a vote on the floor.

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178 US GA: Column: Medical Marijuana Bill Offers Hope But ResearchFri, 28 Feb 2014
Source:Marietta Daily Journal (GA) Author:McKee, Don Area:Georgia Lines:76 Added:03/05/2014

Medical marijuana bill offers hope but research requires much time

The medical marijuana bill approved by a state legislative committee is titled Haleigh's Hope Act, named for Haleigh Cox, a young girl with a condition that causes severe seizures.

"It's hope. That's all it is. Hope. That's what we're fighting for," said Corey Lowe, whose daughter Victoria, 12, suffers from mitochondrial disease that could wrack her body with up to 100 seizures a day if not controlled.

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179 US GA: GA. Weighs 'medical Amnesty' In Drug OverdosesSat, 01 Mar 2014
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA) Author:Cassidy, Christina A. Area:Georgia Lines:92 Added:03/05/2014

ATLANTA - Tanya Smith, a Georgia police officer who oversees criminal investigations, is no stranger to battling the perils of drug abuse. Yet Smith's current fight is personal, in memory of her 20-year-old daughter, Taylor, who died last year while using drugs after no one called 911 for help.

Smith is among a group of parents lobbying on behalf of a bill that would grant amnesty from certain drug charges for those who seek help in the event of a drug overdose. Seventeen states have passed similar so-called "Good Samaritan laws," and proposals are pending this year in others including Georgia and West Virginia.

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180 US GA: PUB LTE: AccountabilityFri, 28 Feb 2014
Source:Macon Telegraph (GA) Author:Preston, Alan Area:Georgia Lines:87 Added:03/05/2014

After purchasing an Atlanta Journal-Constitution newspaper on Feb. 21, I read the opinion piece by sportswriter Jeff Schultz, "UGA's policy gets it right." Schultz was referring to the UGA athletic drug policy following the recent dismissal of a key defensive football player. His factual observations, negative feedback from football fans and comparisons with other university drug policies hit the nail on the head when distinguishing between winning at any cost versus the lives of young athletes.

Within this sports column, UGA Athletic Director Greg McGarity acknowledged that other SEC athletic directors had preliminary discussions about a conference-wide policy last year. McGarity further stated, "the issue got no traction with presidents."

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