|
News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
January 21, 1999
Advocates Anticipate Reopening San Francisco
Medical
Marijuana Facility
January 21, 1999, San Francisco, CA:
Proponents are in final planning stages to open what would be California's largest
operating medical marijuana dispensary. Advocates are encouraged by statements made
by new Attorney General Bill Lockyer who announced that he would not raid state cannabis
clubs.
"I watched my mother and sister die of
leukemia and I know they could have used [marijuana] to ease their pain," he said.
Lockyer added that he supports the existence of well-regulated statewide medical
marijuana dispensaries, and said that his office would not raid such a facility if one
were to re-open in San Francisco.
Jane Weirick, executive director of the San
Francisco Patients Resource Center, intends to do just that. "We plan to run a
very tight ship," she said, adding that she envisions opening an outlet comparable in
size to the former San Francisco Cannabis Cultivators Club. She said that the city's
existing clubs are too small to meet demand and hopes that a new facility could serve
thousands of patients.
Weirick said her group is searching for a
building to house the dispensary, which she intends to open by the end of February.
San Francisco District Attorney Terence
Hallinan voiced support for the facility. "I've always said that it is more of
a health issue than a legal issue," he told The San Francisco Chronicle.
"Locally, this should strictly be a matter for the city Department of
Health."
California NORML Coordinator Dale Gieringer
agrees. "Medical marijuana dispensaries are an asset to the community," he
said. "They provide medicine to the truly ill, divert traffic from street
dealers, generate gainful employment and taxes, and keep pot out of the hands of kids.
That's better than our federal policy has done."
Although approximately 30 medical marijuana
facilities began operating after the passage of Proposition 215, most closed their doors
because of raids by former Attorney General Dan Lungren and a civil lawsuit filed by the
U.S. Justice Department.
For more information, please contact either
Dale Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858 or Allen St. Pierre of The NORML
Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
State Marijuana Eradication Program Poses Environmental, Human
Hazards,
Residents Testify
January 21, 1999, Redway, CA:
Eyewitnesses and former CAMP (California Against Marijuana Planting) employees
testified at hearings Monday to the environmental and human damage caused by the
government's aerial marijuana eradication program. Witnesses largely focused on the
dangers posed by the program's low-flying helicopter sweeps and camouflaged, gun-toting
agents.
"Every officer that's been in a helicopter
involved in the CAMP program, if they were going to tell you the truth, would say: 'Yes,
we have flown under 500 feet' [in violation of legally mandated guidelines,]"
testified Gary Holder, a former deputy sheriff and CAMP officer. "We got as
close as we could to treetops to hover; we have looked into peoples windows."
California NORML Coordinator Dale Gieringer
called the use of helicopters and paramilitary personnel "unwarranted and
inappropriate" because marijuana poses minimal harms to public safety.
Gieringer said the only way to control marijuana cultivation would be through
legally regulated commerce.
Several other witnesses complained that the
raids posed hazards to wildlife and livestock, disrupted work and school, and risked
public safety.
The Civil Liberties Monitoring Project (CLMP)
and The Rights Organization (TRO) organized Monday's hearings on behalf of plaintiffs in a
federal suit against the government's 1990 Operation Greensweep, in which helicopters and
armed troops invaded a remote wilderness area of Humbolt County to eradicate marijuana.
As part of the settlement in that case, the federal Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
was ordered to issue guidelines for marijuana eradication operations in Northern
California and hold public hearings.
The BLM's proposed guidelines are open to
public comment until February 10, 1999. Copies are available from the offices of
NORML Legal Committee member Ron Sinoway at (707) 923-3905 or the CLMP at (707) 923-4646.
For more information, please contact either
Dale Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858 or Allen St. Pierre of The NORML
Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
American Farm Bureau Drops Opposition To Hemp
January 21, 1999, Albuquerque, NM:
Delegates for the American Farm Bureau Federation withdrew language approved last
year opposing research and domestic cultivation of industrial hemp, Reuters News Service
reported.
Representatives from 11 states pushed for the
removal of the language, adopted last year at the request of Missouri Farm Bureau
president Charles Kruse. Kruse lobbied the Farm Bureau after hearing concerns from
law enforcement that hemp and marijuana were indistinguishable.
Delegates initially endorsed a resolution in
1996 to "encourage research into the viability and economic potential of industrial
hemp production in the United States, ... includ[ing] planting test plots ... using modern
agricultural techniques." Delegates voted 198 to 168 last year to reverse that
position.
A spokesman from the Farm Bureau said they
dropped their opposition to hemp because farmers are in need of alternative crops, the
Reuters report said.
At least 29 nations, including Canada, France,
England, Germany, Japan, and Australia, allow farmers to grow non-psychoactive hemp for
its fiber content. This fall, authors of a University of North Dakota study
recommended allowing American farmers to grow test plots of hemp for experimental
production, and estimated that the crop could yield profits as high as $141 per acre to
farmers.
For more information, please contact Allen
St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
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