THE LOS ANGELES JOURNAL FOR EDUCATION ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA — VOL 4 NO 7 JULY 2009 Share This Article Print This Page
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Find The Right Prescription for Legal Acces
Grand Rapids

Grand Rapids, MI -- Michigan voters overwhelmingly approved a medical marijuana ballot initiative last year. A majority of voters in every county supported the issue, which garnered 63 percent of the ballots cast.

The clear intent was to allow people with certain medical conditions to obtain marijuana to relieve suffering. What the law didn't provide, however, was a legal means for approved users to acquire the drug.

Legislation recently introduced in the state Senate takes aim at that glaring hole in the law. It proposes a distribution system for medical marijuana that includes state-licensed growers and prescriptions filled by pharmacists.

Despite passage last November of the medical marijuana initiative, which allows approved patients to possess and grow the drug, it remains illegal in Michigan to buy marijuana or the seeds to grow it. That means residents approved to use medical marijuana, or their caretakers, will have to break the law at some point to acquire it.

The state's medical marijuana law allows people with cancer, HIV, AIDS, glaucoma and other qualifying diseases to use marijuana to relieve their symptoms, if a doctor recommends it. Qualifying patients can apply for a permit allowing them to legally possess

2. 5 ounces of marijuana or grow 12 marijuana plants in a locked, enclosed area, or designate a caregiver to do so for them.

Sens. Wayne Kuipers, R-Holland, and Gerald Van Woerkom, R-Norton Shores, have proposed legislation that calls for medical marijuana to be treated the same as other schedule 2 narcotics used for medical purposes. Drugs such as morphine, steroids, Valium and others are illegal without a doctor's prescription and their production and use are regulated by the government.

The senators are proposing something similar for medical marijuana in Michigan.

Instead of allowing approved users to grow their own supply, the legislation would license up to 10 marijuana growing facilities statewide.

Pharmacists would be required to purchase medical marijuana from those facilities and require a doctor's prescription to distribute it to patients. That could be a stumbling block. Marijuana has not been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Doctors, by federal law, can't prescribe marijuana for a patient, only recommend it.

Although buying, possessing, growing and selling marijuana is a federal crime, the Obama administration has said federal officials will back off prosecuting medical marijuana users in states where voters have approved the drug for medical purposes. That perhaps opens the door to some incarnation of the distribution system proposed by Mr. Kuipers and Mr.Van Woerkom.

Copyright: 2009 Grand Rapids Press



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